04/23/2026
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1379099440921673&set=a.550432810455011
In 1942, everything changed in California.
Under Japanese American internment, thousands of Japanese American families were forced from their homes and sent to camps. Farms were abandoned overnight. Orchards left to die.
For many, it meant losing everything.
In the town of Florin, Bob Fletcher watched his neighbors disappear. The Tsukamoto, Nitta, and Okamoto families. People he knew. People he worked alongside.
Others saw opportunity.
Empty land. No owners. No oversight.
Fletcher saw responsibility.
He made a decision that cost him everything familiar. He quit his job as an agricultural inspector and promised the families something almost impossible:
He would take care of their farms until they came back.
For the next three years, he worked the land alone. Long days. Constant pressure. He faced harassment, threats, even violence from people who didn’t agree with what he was doing.
But he didn’t stop.
He refused to live in the homes of the families he was helping. Instead, he stayed in a simple bunkhouse, even after getting married. He believed he couldn’t take comfort while they were living in camps.
And then there was the money.
He could have kept it. No one would have known.
He didn’t.
He saved every dollar of profit and held it for the families.
In 1945, when they returned, they expected loss.
Instead, they found their orchards alive. Their homes intact. And their savings waiting for them.
Fletcher never asked for recognition.
When asked why he did it, he gave a simple answer:
“It was the right thing to do.”
He didn’t change history.
But he showed what one person can do inside it.
Story based on historical records. This post is for educational purposes.