Almanac note · History and culture
Japanese Tea Garden is a quiet Golden Gate Park story
San Francisco's Japanese Tea Garden began as an 1894 fair exhibit and grew into the oldest public Japanese garden in the United States.
The Japanese Tea Garden is one of the places that makes Golden Gate Park feel layered instead of simply big. It is peaceful now, with paths, stone lanterns, bridges, koi ponds, pagodas, and plants that reward a slower walk.
Its beginning was tied to spectacle. The garden started as a Japanese Village exhibit for the 1894 California Midwinter International Exposition. After the fair closed, Japanese landscape architect Makoto Hagiwara and park superintendent John McLaren made an agreement that allowed Hagiwara to keep shaping the place as a permanent garden.
Hagiwara poured years of work, skill, and family life into the garden. He expanded it from about one acre to about five acres. That makes the garden feel personal as well as public. What began as a fair display became a place shaped by a family and by a city park that kept changing around it.
The story should also be held with care. In 1942, the Hagiwara family and many other Japanese Americans were forced from their homes and sent to incarceration camps. After the war, the family was not allowed to return to its home at the garden.
That history does not make the garden less beautiful. It makes the beauty more honest. A visit can be quiet, lovely, and respectful all at once.
Where to see it
Japanese Tea Garden in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 3, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
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Where it fits on the map
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