After the war, Ogawa returned to Oakland where he found work as a gardener. Eventually, he borrowed and saved enough money to open his own nursery.[6][9]
Ogawa served on the Bay Area Air Quality Management District Board of Directors from 1979 until 1992 when he had to retire from the Board because of health issues. He served as chairman of the board during most of 1987 and served as chair and Vice-Chair of the Board's Executive Committee and Personnel Committee.
Ogawa was a Republican.[10] However, he never held nor was he ever a candidate for any partisan office.
As a public official, Ogawa was known as kind, optimistic, and adept at building consensus.[11]
In about December 1988, Ogawa underwent successful heart surgery.[12]
Death
Ogawa died in Oakland on July 13, 1994, of lung cancer.[13] He was survived by his wife Grace and son Alan, and by two grandchildren, Courtney and Matthew.[9]
More than 600 people, including a representative of Oakland's sister city of Fukuoka, Japan, attended Ogawa's memorial service.[11]
When Ogawa died, Congresswoman Anna Eshoo, in her Tribute to Frank H. Ogawa, said:
"Frank Ogawa was a remarkable person because he could take personal misfortune and turn it into a positive learning experience for himself and others. When Frank and Grace Ogawa were forced to sell their belongings and live in internment camps during World War II, they had to sleep on straw mattresses in horse stalls for six months before being
shipped to a camp in Utah to spend another 3 1/2 years in confinement. Despite this mistreatment and injustice, he never lost faith in the United States. Just the opposite--he strived to prove his loyalty to his country and became an internationally recognized champion of Asian-Americans in the process."[3]
She went on to say
"Having served five years on the Oakland Parks Commission, Frank Ogawa was elected to the city council in 1966, making him the first Japanese-American to hold a council seat in a major city in the continental United States. He held that position for 28 years until his passing -- the longest tenure in Oakland's history."
Legacy
Upon his death, the Oakland City Council Voted unanimously to rename City Hall Plaza in his honor as Frank H. Ogawa Plaza. The Plaza displays a Bronze Bust of Ogawa.
^"Oakland History Timeline". City of Oakland, Oakland History Room of the Oakland Public Library. Archived from the original on 2011-11-12. Retrieved 2011-11-10.
^ abcWilson, Yumi (1994-07-14). "Oakland Councilman Ogawa Dies of Cancer at Age 77". San Francisco Chronicle – via Factiva. Mr. Ogawa made front-page news in Tokyo in April 1966 when he became the first Japanese American to hold a council seat in a major city in the continental United States, according to his son, Alan Ogawa.
^ abLee, Henry K. (1994-07-26). "Frank Ogawa Remembered as Able, Kind". San Francisco Chronicle – via Factiva. More than 600 people, including a representative of Oakland's sister city of Fukuoka, Japan, gathered for the memorial service at the Oakland Museum Garden to share anecdotes and fond memories of Ogawa, who died of lung cancer July 13 at age 77.
^"Wa Sung Service Club Monthly Newsletter". Oakland, California: Wa Sung Service Club. January 1989. p. 2. Archived from the original on 2016-01-14. Retrieved 2011-11-09. Our member and city councilman, Frank Ogawa, has undergone a successful heart operation and is resting and recuperating at home. He says he is all stapled up and feeling fine.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"Passages". The Seattle Times. 1994-07-24. Retrieved 2011-11-08. Frank Ogawa, 77, the longest-serving member of the Oakland, Calif., City Council (28 years), July 13 in Oakland of lung cancer.