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- Q11616376 subject Q13236184.
- Q11616376 subject Q16813886.
- Q11616376 subject Q7012236.
- Q11616376 subject Q7164693.
- Q11616376 subject Q7238355.
- Q11616376 subject Q8519165.
- Q11616376 abstract "The Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Farm Colony was a group of 22 samurai and their families led by Prussian John Henry Schnell during the Boshin Civil War (1868–69) in Japan preceding the Meiji Restoration. The group purchased land from Charles Graner family in the Gold Hill region after coming to San Francisco in 1869. Though the group was able to successfully show their produce during the 1869 California State Agricultural Fair in Sacramento and the 1870 Horticultural Fair in San Francisco, the farm as a Japanese colony only existed between 1869 and 1871.Okei Ito, the first known Japanese woman to be buried on American soil, has her grave on the land. The Veerkamp family purchased the farm following the withdrawal of financial support from financier Matsudaira Katamori (1835–93). In 1969, the same year as the Japanese American centennial, Ronald Reagan, then governor of California, proclaimed the colony to be California Historical Landmark No. 815. The family preserved the heritage of the farm and Okei's grave for 137 years until the American River Conservancy purchased the land on November 1, 2010, and the National Park Service has placed the Wakamatsu Colony site on the National Register of Historic Places at a level of "national significance". It is now a public park where visitors are able to view the farm and gravesite of Okei.".
- Q11616376 wikiPageExternalLink Restoration_at_the_Wakamatsu_Tea_and_Silk_Colony_Farm.htm.
- Q11616376 wikiPageExternalLink CRPT-111srpt308.htm.
- Q11616376 wikiPageExternalLink 0000000002646.pdf.
- Q11616376 wikiPageExternalLink wakamatsunationalregisterform3-16-09.pdf.
- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q1122859.
- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q1156766.
- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q13236184.
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- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q16813886.
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- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q7164693.
- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q7238355.
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- Q11616376 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519165.
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- Q11616376 comment "The Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Farm Colony was a group of 22 samurai and their families led by Prussian John Henry Schnell during the Boshin Civil War (1868–69) in Japan preceding the Meiji Restoration. The group purchased land from Charles Graner family in the Gold Hill region after coming to San Francisco in 1869.".
- Q11616376 label "Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Farm Colony".