Kibei Cowboy

by Kenneth Yamashita

“At age 39, he was undoubtedly one of the oldest cow’boys’ amongst the riders at the Topaz cattle ranch.”

Susumu Yamashita riding "Red"
Susumu Yamashita on “Red,” Topaz cattle ranch

My father, Susumu Yamashita, was a junior executive at the San Francisco branch of Mitsubishi Shoji Kaisha trading company before the December 7, 1941 Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor.  

In the aftermath of FDR’s Executive Order 9066, on April 30, 1942, he was caught up in the mass forced removal of the Japanese American community from Berkeley to Tanforan detention center, a former race track in San Bruno, with my mother Kiyoko Kitano Yamashita and my eight-month-old sister Kimiko. My family was housed in a horse-stall “apartment” (Stable 20—Stall 18) from May to September.  

When my family was transported to the Topaz, Utah incarceration camp in September 1942, my father was recruited by George Lafabregue, the director of the Community Welfare division in Rec. Hall #23, to be his administrative assistant and liaison to the Issei (first-generation) residents due to his Japanese-language proficiency, which was gained from his 11 years of education in Tokyo between 1911–1922. This is why he was labeled as a “Kibei,” American born but educated in Japan.  

After working 14 months in Community Welfare, with its long office hours and on-call weekends providing the camp’s social services, my father was ready for a change from the distressing family case work.

Starting in 1943, my parents had requested leave clearance. Since they were both denied, my mother advised my father to “look for something new and completely different to do in Topaz, something that you might not consider doing after the War.” My Cal Berkeley/Harvard Business School-alumnus, ex-businessman father asked to be transferred to the agricultural division to work as a record keeper and ranch hand. He achieved personal satisfaction from working outdoors as a Kibei cowboy, tanned and healthy, herding cattle astride his favorite horse, Red. At age 39, he was undoubtedly one of the oldest cow”boys” amongst the riders at the Topaz cattle ranch.  

In 1951 he rejoined Mitsubishi and was charged with establishing its New York headquarters as the new Mitsubishi International Corporation.  

After Topaz, my father never rode a horse again. 


About the contributor: Kenneth Akira Yamashita was born in Topaz on September 11, 1945. His father, Susumu, was granted “unofficial” leave in New York City in June 1945 while his mother, Kiyoko Kitano Yamashita, grandmother and aunts remained in camp. He rejoined the family in Berkeley in 1945. Ken grew up in New Jersey and received a BA and MLIS from Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey and a PhD from Simmons University in Boston. He retired from a 40-year career in public libraries in 2010.  

Copyright 2016, Kenneth Yamashita. All rights reserved.

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