11/1/2010

On November 1, 2010 through a critical partnership with Placer Land Trust, the American River Conservancy finalized a deal with willing landowners and conservation partners that has preserved an historic ranch of “National Significance”.

The American River Conservancy (ARC) purchased the 272 acre Gold Hill Ranch, site of the Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Farm Colony, a mile south of Coloma and the Marshall Gold State Historic Park.   This ranch is an interesting mosaic of springs, streams, wetlands, blue and live oak forest, sweeping vistas and prime agricultural soil.  Ranch ponds and the small lake is a draw for wildlife, particularly migratory waterfowl during the winter and early spring.

Many international organizations have joined this effort to acquire this historic colony site first settled by Japanese colonists from Aizu Wakamatsu (Fukushima Prefecture) in July 1869.  To the best of our knowledge the Wakamatsu Colony site:  is the first Japanese colony in North America; contains the gravesite of Okei Ito, the first Japanese woman buried on American soil; is the birthplace of the first naturalized Japanese-American; and is the only settlement established by samurai outside of Japan.  “America derives its strength and its character from the diversity of its people”, states ARC Director Alan Ehrgott.  “The Wakamatsu Colonists were the last of the Tokugawa samurai defeated in the Boshin civil war of 1868-69.  They also became the first, the vanguard of Japanese emigrants to arrive in California as skilled workers that advanced American agriculture, medicine, engineering, and other fields.   The Wakamatsu Colony story is every bit as compelling as the story of Jamestown or the Mayflower and Plymouth Rock.”

In establishing this colony in western El Dorado County (40 miles east of Sacramento) the Wakamatsu Colonists were the first to introduce traditional Japanese horticulture to California including: silk worm farming, the cultivation of tea, rice, citrus, peaches and other stone fruit varieties, paper and oil plants and bamboo products.

This project was made possible in part through grant funding from the Sierra Nevada Conservancy and the Natural Resources Conservation Service, as well as private donations and bridge loans from New Resource Bank and the Veerkamp family.  ARC must pay off these two bridge loans within two years (Oct. 2012).

The National Park Service recently placed the Wakamatsu Colony site on the National Register of Historic Places at a level of “National Significance.” Bills authored by 4th Congressional District Representative Tom McClintock and U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer have been introduced in the House and Senate respectively that would aid in the management of the ranch as a public park.  “Seeing the two parties working together in this manner makes me proud to be an American,” remarked Fred Kochi, President of the Gold Hill Wakamatsu Colony Foundation Board.

The vision of ARC and its project partners is to create a public park at the Wakamatsu Colony site that protects Okei’s gravesite, establishes a memorial garden, creates trails and a house museum within the historic farmhouse, and develops a demonstration and production farm that displays the valuable contributions that Japanese Americans have made to California agriculture and to the United States as a nation of diverse peoples.

Placer Land Trust will hold the conservation easement on the property during the initial park planning phase.

“We’re proud to assist the American River Conservancy and the many agencies, organizations and individuals who all came together to make this project work,” said Placer Land Trust Executive Director Jeff Darlington.  “We’re committed to the protection of the historic, cultural, agricultural and natural values this property contains, and we’re excited to be a part of sharing this treasured landscape with current and future generations.”

In June of 1869, the Wakamatsu Colonists purchased approximately 200 acres, a farmhouse and farm outbuildings from Charles Graner who settled the Gold Hill Ranch in 1856.   Once on the Colony site, the colonists quickly went to work, planting mulberry trees, tea plants and other crops.  The Wakamatsu colonists successfully displayed silk cocoons, tea and oil plants at the 1869 California State Agricultural Fair in Sacramento and at the 1870 Horticultural Fair in San Francisco.

Over the past 137 years, the Veerkamp family has been principally responsible for maintaining the rural agricultural nature of the property and preserving the heritage and landscape of the Wakamatsu Colony.  In late 2007, the Veerkamp family heirs came to the American River Conservancy and asked help in accomplishing three main tasks: (1) restore the Graner-Wakamatsu-Veerkamp farmhouse; (2) provide public access and interpret the cultural history of the Gold Hill Ranch; and, (3) purchase the Gold Hill Ranch at an appraised, fair market value.  With the recent purchase of the 272 acre ranch and the near-completion of the Phase #1 restoration of the historic farmhouse, the American River Conservancy is well on its way to fulfilling all three tasks.

Recently, Mary Jean Eisenhower, the President of People to People International, summarized the benefits of the project, “The tale of a small group of Japanese immigrants who traveled to California and the Veerkamp family who befriended them is a wonderful example of People to People International in action.  When my grandfather [Dwight D. Eisenhower] founded People to People, he said, ‘ I have long believed, as have many before me, that peaceful relations between nations requires understanding and mutual respect between individuals.’  What better example of this than people from such diverse backgrounds working together through the shared bond of agriculture?  The historical value of their partnership is immeasurable and is certainly a testament to the regional connection between the people of California and Japan.”

Prominent partners include:  the City of Aizu Wakamatsu, Japan; the Japanese American Citizens League; the Japanese American Historical Society; the California Rice Commission, the Placer Land Trust, the Consul General of Japan, the Sierra Nevada Conservancy, California Department of Parks and Recreation, the Natural Resources Conservation Service (USDA);  the California Cultural and Historical Endowment; the California Office of Historic Preservation; The El Dorado County Chamber of Commerce;  People to People International and the Gold Hill Wakamatsu Colony Foundation.

Photos, site tours, and interview opportunities are available upon request:

American River Conservancy

530-621-1224 or 530-651-3027

Website:  www.arconservancy.org

Contact Person:  Noël Robinson, Director of Marketing and Development

Email:  noel@arconservancy.org

 

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