Frank Okamura

Japanese horticulturist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroJapanese horticulturist
PlacesJapan
wasHorticulturist
Work fieldBiology
Gender
Male
Birth5 May 1911, Hiroshima, Japan
Death9 January 2006Manhattan, USA (aged 94 years)
Star signTaurus
The details

Biography

Frank Masao Okamura (May 5, 1911 – January 9, 2006) was a Japanese-born American horticulturalist who helped popularize the cultivation of bonsai in America.

Biography

Born in Hiroshima, Okamura emigrated to California at the age of 13. He lost his small gardening business when in 1942, Okamura, his wife, and his two daughters were interred at Manzanar War Relocation Center. After the war, the Okamuras relocated to New York City. Okamura found work at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in 1947. He was brought on to help restore the vandalized Japanese garden and to look after their ailing bonsai collection.

George Avery, also of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, noticed an influx of bonsai trees returning from the war with American soldiers. He enlisted the help of Okamura to develop a lesson plan for the care of bonsai. Okamura began lecturing nationwide, teaching over 6,000 students over three decades. He was considered one of three major teachers of bonsai in America.

Under his direction, the bonsai collection of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden grew from 11 plants to over 1,000. He retired from the Garden in 1981.

Awards

Okamura was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure with Silver Rays in 1981 by Emperor Hirohito.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 19 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.