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【rebecca ferguson sex videos】After Over 80 Years of Service, F.K. Nursery in Sawtelle Closes

【rebecca ferguson sex videos】After Over 80 Years of Service, F.K. Nursery in Sawtelle Closes
Courtesy F.K. Nursery
Kuniye and Kumaichi Kageyama established F.K. Nursery in 1936 in the Sawtelle neighborhood of Los Angeles. After surviving a world war, racial discrimination, incarceration and the inevitable highs and lows of the local economy, the legacy business will wrap up its operations this week.

By CHRIS KOMAI

As the Kageyama family prepared for the closing of F.K. Nursery in the Sawtelle area of West Los Angeles on June 28, Eric, the youngest of the Sansei siblings who have run the business inherited from their Nisei parents and uncle, which was started by their Issei grandparents in 1936, acknowledged the finality of the family’s decision to close.
“It was time,” Eric explained.

Like so many of the Japanese American multi-generational family businesses that persevered through overt racial discrimination, World War II, resettlement and the ups and downs of changing times, F.K. Nursery had gotten through 88 years through hard work, sacrifice, and the dedication of the family and the nursery’s workers. There also was the loyalty of their customers, some for as long as 40 years, and the support for each generation from family and friends when things were hardest.

Having been sitting undisturbed at the nursery for decades, this traveling trunk is one of several the family brought back from Manzanar. It contains a trove of Japanese books and other items.

According to Eric, today’s economic forces and regulations on top of the recent COVID-19 pandemic made it clear that the nursery’s closing was unavoidable. Eric revealed some community members tried to encourage them to continue, but the truth is that only those who have worked a family business every day, year after year, can appreciate the current challenges and the family’s final choice.

“The decision (to close the business) came during the holidays,” Eric said. “We’ve been thinking about it for a while. My brother (Ron) is almost 70. My sister Julie is almost 60. It was a tough decision. We felt a responsibility to our workers. Some have been working for 30 years.”

That includes five office workers and 11 who did the manual labor. But to add perspective, in 2003, F.K. Nursery had 30 workers. Since then, eldest son Mark left the business 10 years ago and sister Diane passed away. Ultimately, the numbers don’t lie.

F.K. Nursery is neither a retail nursery selling plants, hoses and insecticide to walk-up customers nor a wholesaler that grows plants to sell to other nurseries.

“We only sell to the landscapers,” Eric noted. “We fill special orders.

Photos by MARK KURODA
Eric Kageyama, the third-generation owner of F.K. Nursery, said it was a family decision to finally close the business.

We’re brokers who help landscapers find the plants they want from the wholesalers. We do have things in stock, but we have to order them. My brother Ron said we’re sort like the 7-11 of nurseries.”

As with so many stories of family businesses in the Japanese American community, it begins with the Issei Kumaichi and Kuniye Kageyama, immigrants from Sakai Minato, Tottoriken. Upon their arrival, Kumaichi was able to find work as a gardener, while Kuniye worked at another nursery to learn the trade. They scraped together enough money to start a small nursery in the Sawtelle neighborhood, which in the 1930s was composed of small farms growing lima beans.

Kumaichi had adopted the first name of Fred and so F.K. Nursery was born. The Kageyamas had four children: Ruby, Hiroshi, Akira and Hideo, all of whom eventually worked at the nursery.

Ambitious enough to want to expand their footprint for the nursery, the Kageyamas were able to purchase neighboring plots under the names of their American friends to circumvent the Alien Land Laws. This proved fortuitous; when World War II began and all people of Japanese ancestry were unlawfully removed from their homes by the U.S. government, the Kageyamas’ property remained secure.

The family situation was awful for the Kageyamas. Kumaichi was picked up by the FBI because of his role as the manager of the local community center’s kendo club while Kuniye was hospitalized for months. With older sister Ruby stuck in Japan, the three brothers were sent to Manzanar under the care of family friends Isamu and Shizue Ikebuchi. The family was reunited when Kuniye recovered and Kumaichi was released from the Santa Fe, N.M. camp in 1943.

When the war ended, the Kageyamas still had their property and restarted the nursery in 1945. Eventually, they were able to purchase a house adjacent to their property at 2027 Colby Ave., which became their home and the nursery’s headquarters. When the oldest son Hiro turned 21, the property was transferred into his name.

Courtesy F.K. Nursery
From left: Eric’s father, Hiro, his uncle, Aki and Kumaichi. Aki gave up school so that his brothers could earn their college degrees.

After both Hiro and Aki completed their military service, they used what is known as “mustering out” pay (about $300 each) to purchase the nursery’s first truck. Ruby and her husband Nobuyuki Ueda along with younger brother Hideo had been maintaining the business with their parents, but with his older brothers’ return, Hideo went on to become one of the first Japanese American orthopedic surgeons in Los Angeles.

Again, the family invested in the business, buying nearby land and going into debt. Facing stiff competition, they decided to become a wholesale supplier of plants to gardeners and landscapers, its current business. This while Hiro married his wife Betty (Uemura) and started their family.

Hiro and Aki took over the business as their parents eventually passed away. Everyone had to scrimp and Aki even stopped taking a paycheck to help make ends meet. He also sacrificed going to college so that his brothers could get their degrees. But eventually, the tide turned and the business began to grow. With a little prosperity, F.K. Nursery supported the local community, enough that the brothers were recognized at the West Los Angeles Community Service luncheon in 1996.

By the 1990s, the Hiro Kageyama children had all worked at the nursery, but all still went to college. Brother David became an optometrist out of college. The Sansei generation helped to develop F.K. Nursery, remodeling the shack that had been the business office for decades and bringing in computers to speed up processing. It also began to rely on growers throughout California and beyond to acquire the plants their clients requested. That is how the business has operated until today.

F.K. Nursery built its company as neither a wholesaler nor a customer retail outlet, supplying professional landscapers to enable them to grow their own businesses. a€?Wea€?re sort like the 7-11 of nurseries,a€? one member of the family has said.

Eric said the family’s plan is to sell off the property. As the youngest at 52, Eric has already figured out his next occupation: basketball coach at West Torrance High. He grew up playing for the Tigers Youth Club in the JA community leagues. His father was delighted to sponsor one of the last dominating Lakers AA basketball teams in the Southern California Nisei Athletic Union.

“My dad was proud of the nursery’s relationship to the team, which scrimmaged against the U.S. Women’s Basketball to prepare for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games,” Eric recalled.

After the family decided to close the business, Eric, whose daughter Shay played basketball at West Torrance High, became aware of a coaching opening and applied. “I’m ready,” he stated. “I’m sad, but I’m excited. It was my choice to stay at the nursery, but now this has happened.”

To close out the business on the last day, the family decided to keep it small. “Just the family and the workers,” Eric revealed. “Maybe get a taco truck.”

Originally, that included Betty and Aki, but sadly, one week before the business is scheduled to close, Uncle Aki passed away at 91 years of age. “It was very hard for him to process the thought of us closing after devoting his life to it,” Eric shared. “He would keep saying, ‘Mama and Papa worked so hard.’ We all wondered if the heartbreak of closing would be the end, but I never imagined it would happen the week of.”

It is one of the sadder aspects of family businesses closing. Japanese American legacy businesses have unfortunately continued to close and that will not change. But the Kageyamas fortunately created a booklet in 2003 based on their family history, so the sacrifices by their family members, including by Aki, will not be forgotten. And the story of F.K. Nursery will live on.


F.K. Nursery joins a long list of Japanese American legacy business closures. To read more click here:https://rafu.com/2023/12/little-tokyo-legacy-business-evicted-during-the-holidays/

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