Mykawa was named after a
Japanese nurseryman named
Shinpei Mykawa, who, by 1906, introduced the cultivation of
rice in the area. The community was renamed from
Erin Station after Mykawa died after he fell underneath one of his pieces of agricultural equipment. Officials from the
Santa Fe Railroad Company renamed the station after Mykawa, and many Japanese immigrants to Texas perceived it as a place friendly to Asian Americans because of the town's naming. Mykawa's name, as the town name and the name of Mykawa Road, is pronounced differently from the actual Japanese name
Maekawa. For a period Mykawa had a community of Japanese rice farmers. John M. Moore of the
Houston Post said that it "seems to be" that salt water and waste oil introduced by a nearby oil field destroyed some rice field crops cultivated by the Japanese farmers, causing them to leave the area before
World War II; Moore said that area residents erroneously believed that the farmers left as a result of World War II. By 1951 the nearest Japanese farmers were located near
Minnetex. During that year many of the Japanese farmers formerly in Mykawa resided in north Harris County. as the 1948
Shelley v. Kraemer Supreme Court decision meant that neighborhoods could no longer have rules excluding people on the basis of race. Terroristic threats were made against the Sunnyside community. In 1951 Moore said that Mykawa was losing its individual identity and was becoming a part of Houston. Moore said "I found out that Mykawa was gradually losing its individuality." Moore said that when he visited a general store where natives of the area said that they did most of their shopping, the clerk was unaware that there was a community called "Mykawa." ==Cityscape==