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Home Texas Orange County Vidor Site of The Kishi Colony
     

Site of The Kishi Colony

  Texas Historical Markers
Vidor, TX, USA

Latitude & Longitude: 30° 5' 17.02236000012", -93° 56' 10.74933999996"
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
     Japanese native Kichimatsu Kishi (d. 1956), a veteran of the Russo-Japanese War, 1904-05, established an agricultural colony at this site in 1908. The first settlers were Japanese tenant farmers. Despite their eventual American citizenship and the adoption of several western customs, they managed to maintain the traditions of their homeland. Several crops were raised here, but the fertile soil and abundant water were best suited for rice production. Later, workers of Mexican and French Louisiana descent joined the settlement. In order to serve the growing colony, Kishi deeded land for a church and a school. A nearby cemetery was started in 1910 for the burial of a young colonist, T. Toba. Unstable market prices, damaged crops, and financial hardships led to the decline of the colony. The end came as a result of the economic Depression of the 1930s. Some settlers moved to other states, but many remained. Several of the men served with American forces during World War II. The Kishi colony was instrumental in the economic growth of Orange County. Only the cemetery and a few structures mark the site, but descendants of original settlers still live in Southeast Texas.

This page last updated: 7/15/2008

Site of The Kishi Colony Historical Marker Location Map, Vidor, Texas