SAMISH AND VENDOVIA ISLANDS:
RECORDS AND THOUGHTS
Compiled
by
Evelyn Hopley Clift
(1964)
SAMISH ISLAND EARLY SETTLERS
It is much too late to learn the
story of Samish Islands early history from the lips of the first
pioneers. They are gone as are the
Indians who once made the Island home, or an important rendezvous. But I have pieced together from the family
Bible, old letters, several newspaper clippings of long ago and personal interviews
with grandsons what tells a little part of those early days. I pass it on humbly, filled with awe at the
courage, fortitude, strength and kindliness of the particular pioneer woman I
found.
Time and the humid climate have all but
erased the signs which tell us that here was a white man's first crude cabin or
there an Indian's smoky long-house.
The clearings, so laboriously made,
remain . . . greatly extended by tractor and bulldozer. Roads that are wide and smooth today were
once native trails, then narrow pathways and wagon roads.
Occasionally one comes upon a bit of
orchard long forgotten, a portion of rotting rail fence, a wagon wheel,
pestles, weights the natives used to anchor their nets, arrow heads, a lonely
grave.
One of the earliest settlements by
white men in what is today Skagit County was on Samish Island. Projecting westward from the Samish River
flats into the deep waters of Padilla and Samish Bays, the island is just over
3 miles long and 3/4 mile wide. It was
originally separated from the mainland by Siwash Slough, so called for the 2000
or so Siwash who had their long-house there and hunted and fished these
waters. Siwash meaning North
American Indian of the Pacific Coast. INDIAN
Indian, not the unfortunate connotation given the word in this day. At low tide this Siwash slough could be
waded by man in high boots.
Dan Dingwall (often called Dan Dingle)
seems to have been the first permanent white settler. He started a logging camp in 1872… the first such undertaking in Skagit
County. The sawmill was operated
by a windmill. It was remembered by George Hopley to be "crude and
homemade. Even the cog wheels were made of round disks with yew wood pins
for teeth. They certainly had to be ingenious to do the things they did
out of what they had at hand."
Two years later in partnership with
Thomas Hayes, Dingwall opened a store adjoining Siwash Slough. William Dean, a dour old Scot, soon
replaced Hayes as Dingwalls partner, but realizing the island’s potential, he
started a store of his own in 1873. It
was called Deans Inn and he kept several rooms to let to travelers . . . the
loggers heading inland usually stayed overnight on Samish.
Mr. Dingwall became postmaster in the
Samish Post Office in 1870. The next
known post office was at Perleys, very near the Jim Raby place. This building was later moved to the
property opposite the church, and John Walch lived there for years . . . Walch
had been an old sailor, had his ears pierced in the then belief it would
benefit his eyes . . . wore big gold earrings a tall, large man with a broad
Scottish accent, and looked every bit the part of the shaggy old sailor he
was. He built a nice sloop to sail and
was always reported to have money buried on his property.
The arrival of George Eckenberger
followed Dingwall and Dean. He was a
veteran of the Civil War, from Ohio, and took up a 160 acre claim on the south side
of the island in 1877. His
wife Elizabeth was the first white woman on the island, preceeding the second
by seven years.
Watson Hodge and George Dean followed . . . several of
these men married Indian women. Mr.
Hodge’s wife was of the Blackfoot tribe in Montana.
GEORGE
ECKENBERGER
Born December 23, 1843 in
Posey County Ohio, the 3rd of six children born to Leonard and Henrietta
Eckenberger, who had married near Neurnberg, Germany in 1834 and emigrated to
this country in 1836.
The father died during the cholera
epidemic when the son was young. The mother subsequently married Captain
John Yochem of the Union Army.
Mr. Eckenberger left his home in 1860
and went to Alabama to follow steam boating.
When the Civil War broke out he went North and enlisted in the 30th Ohio
under Captain Riley, and served that command at the 2nd Battle of Bull Run and other
engagements. He was home on sick leave
when the war ended. He soon after went
to Indiana and at Evansville in that state worked for 12 years at masonry. He then crossed the continent by rail to San
Francisco and came thence to Seattle in 1875.
During the time spent in Seattle he twice visited Samish Island, then
returned In 1877 and took up the land on which he resided continuously until
his death, November 25, 1929.
The claim was under heavy timber and
thousands of feet of good marketable timber had to be destroyed to make way for
a clearing and the crops.
The first home erected was a small log cabin,
which stood near the bay. This cabin was destroyed by fire, which was started
when a bucket of pitch being heated to use for caulking a boat.boiled over on
the stove. A sack of flour and several
blankets were all that was salvaged. It
was after this incident the historic Eckenberger home was built in about 1880.
An examination of the old building some
60 years later, after constant use, proved interesting, as reported in
part by the Mount Vernon Argus:
“The
weathered grey building, the oldest on Samish Island, was erected on the
original homestead of 160 acres. Nearly
every piece of lumber and the foundation used in its construction was hand-cut or hand-hewn. Huge cedar logs, hewn flat on one side were placed for the
foundation. The upper flooring was straight
grained, hand split cedar which was not nailed down. The upper layer was of milled flooring brought in from a lumber
yard at
La Conner. The studding and joists in the framework and the siding were also
of hand-hewn cedar.
By far the most outstanding feature of the house was
the fireplace, constructed by Mr. Eckenberger of the material he found on the
island. A stone mason by trade, he made
chimney bricks by hand of the clay from the high back along the beach. The
fireplace was backed by big rocks and sealed of the same clay. Parts of the front structure were slabs of
slate rock from Point Williams at the west end of the island, as were several
areas of the front of the building.
How the fireplace could stand constant use for 60
years was remarkable for the clay bricks when dismantled, apparently smooth and
solid, crumbled easily when struck with a hammer. An inner door studding served
as “bank” for this pioneer home. It was partially hollowed at several levels
with a sliding panel to cover it so skillfully done it was difficult to locate,
even knowing where it was.
ELIZABETH ECKENBERGER
Born in Evansville, Indiana, July 4,
1842. The daughter of Benjamin and
Alice (Hayes) Garis . . . she had two brothers who served in the Union Army, names
unknown to us.
Married to
George Eckenberger in Evansville, Indiana, June 5, 1865. She was the first
white woman to settle here, preceeding the 2nd by seven years. A hardy pioneer woman, she held the place
while her husband was in Seattle or Whatcom County, working at masonry. At one time she did not see another white
woman for 18 months. She labored with
her man at clearing the land . . . she was a tall somewhat stooped woman, slim,
and inquiry brings the quick response that she was the kindliest of humans.
She served as midwife to all during her years at
Samish. She readily visited the
sick. The story was told many times of
the indians crouching at her doorstep until they would be given a measure of
sugar.
The home is
recalled by grandsons as warm and inviting and "pretty". Always
meticulously clean and neat. The
bedrooms had large feather beds, pieced quilts and rocking chairs. The main room dominated by the fireplace
contained rocking chairs, carved straight chairs, a lounge and a table. The kitchen was large . . . cupboards
covered one long wall. The end of the
room opposite the stove and table had barrels of stored food . . . eggs, flour,
dried and preserved fruits and vegetables, while overhead hung smoked meats,
dried corn, etc. It is remembered that
a large board covered the flour barrel and this served as worktable for the
delicious bread and pies that came from her oven. Meals were punctual~ breakfast was always at 5:30 a. m., the big meal of the day at 10:30 and
for this Mrs. Eckenberger had often walked to the Watson Hodge claim and
"gone fishing" with Mrs. Hodge for their dinner, walking back home
and having dinner on the table at the appointed time. Supper was at 4:30 and there was no more work that day! Mrs. Eckenberger made her own coffee from
barley roasted 'just so' in her oven.
Her chosen
epitaph: "Their's but to see the
task and do it; Their's but the meager glory of the day . . . and then forgotten".
Their 160
acre claim was devoted to cattle raising, dairying, hay and a 7 acre orchard of
first quality ....I'm told even today of their generosity in sharing of this
bounty. In later years their claim was
broken up into 12 farm properties, 5 acres going to each of their children ...
Martha, John, George, Lucy and Fred.
Other parcels being sold to Wilbur J. Hopley, Georgiana Hopley, Andrew
Holmes, Gilmore, etc.
Eight children
were born to the Eckenbergers, 5 of whom reached adulthood. Mary reached age 8 and Henrietta and Louisa
died as infants.
The family experienced the extremes of
difficult times but always rallied. They knew well the vicissitudes of
the pioneer. Their 3rd year here a
forest fire swept the Island and things looked so discouraging that Mr.
Eckenberger offered his property for sale at $300.00 but could find no
purchaser. Hard times were experienced
until the boom commenced in 1881-2 when Mr. Eckenberger’s knowledge of the
country stood him in good stead in locating settlers.
The land grant from the U.S.A. to
George Eckenberger is recorded in Vol. 7 of Patents p. 349 in the year 1889,
signed by President Arthur. This
conveys Gov. lots 2-3-4 as outlined on the map.
Everything in the Samish Country
depended on diking of the salt water flats and marshlands. This important undertaking was inagurated by
John Muller in 1871, by whom 60 acres were enclosed. This place later occupied by Nathaniel McCullough (near
Samish River). Dan Sullivan reclaimed
160 acres during the same year at a cost of $13, 000. Both Muller and Sullivan land produced bountiful crops of oats in
1872-3.
About this
time Ben Welcher introduced a diking machine that operated at a cost of $5.00
per rod.
As the Samish flats flourished, Samish
Island became more important as a freight and mail center for the inland
region. With 3 docks, 3 saloons, a
hotel and a fish cannery employing 25 Chinese, logging, & boat building,
travelers bound inland for the logging camps made overnight stops at Samish as
a rule.
Before the
docks the stern-wheel and side-wheel steamers anchored offshore and put their
passengers ashore by rowboat. After the
docks were built, and especially after the dock went to deep water, wood which
was used to supply their fuel was a considerable and highly competetive job . .
. many an argument developed and it is said
when fists would not suffice to settle an issue, an ax handle often
did.
Freight was unloaded here and ferried
by flat boat with sail to Edison. This was not a gentle business . . . putting
strength and know-how against wind, tide, snow and rain . . . these flat boats
were rigged with sail but very often had to be rowed.
Water was never plentiful on the Island
. . . several springs and numerous wells supplied the need. Issues of the Coast Pilot of the 1880's
warned skippers that Samish Island was no place for watering vessels.
In 1881 the settlers built a bridge
across the North Samish near Edison, using cedar logs for bents and cedar
logging for flooring. William Dean did
the pile driving. A dike was early
completed across the flats to Samish Island, affording the interior easy
connection with the Seattle -Whatcom steamers on the sound and ferry boats
established between the island and the mainland.
GEORGIANA
E. HOPLEY
A widow with 6 children came first to
Seattle in 1881, where she kept a lodging house for a short time. Aiming to get a homestead, she found 160
acres on the Samish River and filed claim . . . a son took a pre-emption claim
of 40 acres adjoining her claim. I do
not know the description of this property but believe it was bounded by Farm to
Market Road and the Sunset Road. A
son, A. Lincoln, a pressman for Lowman & Hanford in Seattle gave his mother
a large share of his earnings to assist her in paying for and clearing up her
claim. Dan Sullivan later bought 1/4 of
her Samish River claim, a Mr. Evans, a school teacher a small part and the rest
unknown.
In 1885 Georgiana bought 5 acres on
Samish Island from George Eckenberger and built a home which is
presently the Guderjahn property. The lumber for this house was milled in
Anacortes, freighted to Samish and was hand carried up the steep bank at the
home site. She bought and built on this
property so the son and daughter who homesteaded Vendovia Island in 1881 would
have a place to come to get away from the bruising loneliness they experienced.
Wilbur J. Hopley and sister Eva G. Hopley homesteaded
Vendovia Island and established a sheep ranch there . . . clearing land and constructing
homes. They found the island could only
support 175 sheep but sold wool at l5¢ per pound . . . packing it in large bags
and taking it aboard their 32 foot schooner to the Seattle markets, and selling
mutton and lamb to markets in Bellingham and Anacortes. Poachers were a real problem to the homesteaders. They frequently found carcasses of butchered
animals whenever they left the island.
Wilbur J. Hopley married Martha
Eckenberger of Samish Island in 1890 and she went as a bride at sixteen years
of age to the comfortable home he had established for her on Vendovia. Their first son Wilfred was born
on Samish Island in February 1892. Harvey L. Hopley, born in April 1894 was the
only white child born on Vendovia, and the aunt who was present told me of
their dismay when at dusk of the evening he was born, a party of Haidas (3
canoes) came ashore and made camp just below their house. The homesteaders were defenseless so
barricaded themselves and trusted . . . mornings light showed the Haida had
departed.
Later in 1894 the family returned to Samish Island
to make their home. The Vendovia
home was dismantled and the lumber freighted to Samish and used to construct
the nucleus of the home built here. In
1896 four more room were added. Hattie
was born to them in June 1897, and Jack in May 1900.
The family befriended an old gentleman . . . Andrew
Holmes, a kindly bachelor who had a good productive farm at the present Leonard
Pike location. In his later years, Mr.
Holmes suffered greatly with rheumatism and was cared for at his own home until
totally disabled. A small house was
then built for him at the Hopley home and he was cared for there.
Farming, logging and boating sustained
the family. Sons recall many trips with
their father in his schooner, and then in 1900 the joy of a first gas powered
boat. Several years later the Reliance
was built. The Clift Motors in
Bellingham building the gas engine.
Passengers, freight and mail were carried to Bellingham, Anacortes and
other islands.
Wilbur J. Hopley also for some 15 years
carried mail by horse from Samish Island to Edison, many times walking to break
snow for his animal. The new road, so marshy, was laid with slab log
from Squires to approximately the Hank Ploeg farm.
The 2nd post
office was at Perleys. The mail had
first come once weekly on the "J. B. Libby", and once weekly on the
steamer "Dispatch” from Port Townsend.
The 7 mile route to Edison was later increased to 3x weekly . . . the
contract granted to E. C. Brown in 1886 was for $135.00 … mail later came 4x weekly.
Some memories of Hopley sons:
One memory of those early
"sailing" trips: When
returning from Lummi one stormy day the sail became torn . . . the ingenious
father managed to make shore at Vendovia, cut a goodly sized willow tree,
wrestled it into the place of the mast and they "sailed home in good time.
Wilfred
(Woody) tells me he recalls being sent as a little boy to bring the cows
home. He was terrified at the
possibility of becoming lost in the very dense woods . . . in bright daylight
it was very dusky. When he found the
cows by the sound of their bells, he would hold tightly to their tails to
insure his getting back home safely with them.
There is a memory of Harvey and Woody
when as very small boys they were walking past the logging camp cook shack near
the back at a point near the Fred Schram home when the elderly cook stepped to
the door and threatened to cut Woodys nose off with the long knife he
held. The two boys raced for home and
an irate father quickly returned to the cook shack, where the matter was soon
settled with the cooks assurance it was only a "very bad joke" and
would never happen again!
Bull team
logging was done on the entire Eckenberger claim. Dogfish livers were fried out on the beach in big kettles to
grease the skids. The logs were hauled
by teams of 6-8 horses on these skids to a ramp that led onto a tressle at
about the Jim Squires place, where they were dumped into Siwash Slough. The skid for this effort started in the back
of the Wilbur J.Hopley place.
One very vivid memory of Wilfred and
Harvey is of an occasion when as very small boys they had followed the team to
see the load loosed… something did not follow through and in seconds not only
logs but horses too were threshing about on their backs in the slough mud. The scramble and flurry of activity and
eventual cutting of the precious harness made for lasting impressions.
One other memory of these same two
little boys mentioned above at play one day near the smoke house, they
unearthed a container that held enough money to make their eyes pop . . . they
raced to the house with their find, to be chagrined at the dismay they caused .
. . they had unearthed the family fortune!
There were a number of squatter
buildings at Fish Point . . . about 15, mostly built before Dad’s time. They were where fishermen rested, tended
their nets and stored them at rivers edge . . . and where a number of families
made their homes.
Many people
recall the Indians coming to Samish Island on the big tidal run-outs to dig the
horse clams they preferred. And bf
their drying them on the beach, over hot coals, strung on split stakes hung
over forked limbs.
There has probably never been a summer
in the history of Puget Sound in which destructive forest fires have not raged,
and the summer of 1885 was certainly no exception. Fires on Guemes and Fidalgo Islands swept through some of the
most magnificent fir trees . . . 200-300 feet in height, destroying standing
timber, wood, rails, fences and the buildings so laboriously constructed. At
this same time the Samish country was ravaged by destructive fires. Over 1000 acres of land in that vicinity
were swept clean of improvements, loggers were driven out and all operations
interrupted for that year. Clothier and
English and McElroy were the greatest sufferers. These fires continued their destructive work and the entire sound
country was wrapped in a pall of smoke until September 26 when a drenching rain
and southerly gale put the fires out, clearing the smoke and brought back the
sun and stars, releasing smoke-beleaguered ships and steamers and ministered
consolation to all the inhabitants of the sound country.
The year 1886 seem a to have been comparatively
unproductive of special events. As
happened every year of history in Puget Sound, there were high tides and floods
such as people are wont to think the most remarkable of all time. It seems that on January 24 the highest tide
known at that time since records were kept, swept the coastline of the county,
topping the dikes by inches, destroying a great deal of property and greatly
damaging the crop prospects for the ensuing year. The damage was felt especially in the vicinity of Padilla. Immediately following this remarkable tide,
a spell of severe cold during which the Skagit river was blocked with ice, a
large part of the country having been inundated by the high tide and the ice
having formed on the flooded area, the farmers were subject to serious
inconvenience.
It was in 1886 that George Washington
Lafayette Allen built the ATLANTA HOME, the hotel later called Lummi
Lodge, to honor his Atlanta, Georgia home, and dedicated to “all
Confederate friends, and these who shared the Lost cause.”
The hotel faced Bellingham Bay, a large
door banked by high windows on each side centered the front of the
building. This door opened into a large
lobby which extended across the whole front of the building, a large dinning
room led off from this as did a narrow stairway to rooms above. There were living quarters below as well as
a huge kitchen and storerooms and a work shop.
Two large guest rooms at the head of the stairway faced the bay, and a
center narrow hallway led to other rooms, a narrow stairway led to another level
where two dormitory-like rooms apparently served employees. A boardwalk
extended the length of the hotel on Edna Street, leading from the dock at which
it is said sometimes 16 steamers a day came.
Mr. Allen operated the hotel for
several years then leased it and moved to La Conner. He later returned to pass away in 1903 at his apartment in the
hotel. His family continued with the
hotel for several years after his death, then moved to Seattle.
Subsequent owners
were Petty, Cleave, Kerr, Knause and in 1926 the property was purchased by Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Keith. The hotel burned to the ground on January 5, 1933. The fire started in the chimney and the
building consumed in less than an hour.
The H. P. Halls, as
related by Mrs. George C. Hopley in 1952 (Mamie) came to Samish Island on June
6, 1889 . . . the year of the fires . . . the stern wheeler
"Washington" landed them at the beach and they came ashore with all
their houseful goods. They came to live
in what remained of an old hotel at Fish Point. The father was to have charge of Col. Haller’s place.
Mrs. Hall cooked at the Point for the haying crews . .
. who were bothered greatly by the mosquitoes.
Baled hay was stored at the large barn at the Point, the site of a short
dock that was cribbed up and extended a short distance into the river at that
point. Later, oats were shipped from
here.
Col. Haller lived in Seattle. In later years his son Theodore hunted here, boarding at the John
Eckenberger home during his stays. At
one time he became mired in the mud (quicksand) in front of the Eckenberger
home and John was able to free him and so save his life.
Mrs. Hopley (Mamie Hall) recalled that as children they
had a considerable walk to school and always walked UNDER the cannery that was
located at approximately the Gail Miller property, when the tide was out.
George Eckenberger was the first
road boss (supervisor) on Samish and built Front Street as is.
There was great rivalry between
George Allen and George Dean. When G.W.
L. Alien plotted Atlanta in June 12, 1883, George Dean hurriedly plotted the
town of Samish, and that on June 18, 1883.
An inventory
for closing of an estate in December 1903 was noted:
10 beds and bedding
……. $50.00
1 range …….…….……. $25.00
5 stoves …….…….……. $25.00
2 doz. Chairs …….……. $10.00
4 rocking chairs ………. $10.00
1 organ …….…….……. $25.00
1 horse …….…….……. $50.00
2 cows …….…….……. $60.00
1 Morris chair …….….. $ 5.00
1 express wagon …….
$10.00
6 doz. Chickens …….
$28.00
verified by appraisers: Jas Squires, Wlbr. J. Hopley, George
Eckenberger.
The Lewis family came to Samish in February 1884, purchasing
Lot 1, block 12 from George Dean, and later buying more land from him. Looking
over old abstracts, there are many names long forgotten, and NUMEROUS names never
heard before.
In 1914 A. R. (Gus) Lewis built the dance hall that
attracted such crowds. Mr. Lewis furnishing the lumber and volunteer labor
putting the structure together. It was
a building judged to be about 90 by 50 feet.
Name orchestras of the day played and boats came even from
Bellingham. It was very well patronized
. . . some good rowdy fights took place on occasion . . . one orchestra which
played there often had as mascot a cigar-smoking English bulldog which sat atop
the piano.
The William Hebard family came
to Samish in 1922, coming from Montana. They bought 47 acres and raised poultry
. . . in the early 1930's being noted by
the Co-op as the largest egg producing business in Skagit. County.
GE'ORGE DEAN
A shipwright by trade, for many years postmaster on Samish,
and one of the early comers to Samish Island.
Made a success in business though at times experienced difficult times. Born in Banffshire, Scotland January 15,' 1830 the 4th of 10
children of Wm. and Catherine (Horn) Dean, both of whom lived and died in the old country. When a lad of 14 years, George left home to
serve a 5 year apprenticeship to the trade of shipwright. On receiving his papers he worked at
Aberdeen, Scotland, Dundee, Glasgow and Newcastle, England. Each time changing location because of labor
troubles. In 1875 he came to the United States, landing in New York, and
started on a tour of the country, which was completed at Seattle in the fall of
1875. Mr.
Dean arriving there on the first steamer which entered that port. The city boasted of but two hotels then -
the Occidental and the New England.
After looking over Seattle for 2 weeks,
Mr. Dean came to Samish Island where a brother was keeping store and post office,
this at the steamboat landing. Samish
Island was then the chief distributing point for the whole valley as far back
as Warner’s Prairie, but there was but one white family on the Samish
flats. Mail came by the steamer J.B.
Libby once a week and the steamer Dispatch from Port Townsend stopped once in 7
days. It was not unusual to see a band
of 100 Samish Indians about the store and post office and Mr. Dean soon became
able to converse with them. Much of the
waterfront around Edison had been taken up but no one lived there until about
1880 when settlement began in earnest.
Soon after his arrival Mr. Dean built a sawmill, using wind as motive
power, and with lumber turned out from that mill he built a schooner, which he
sailed for 9 years. Then he built the schooner
"Mary Purley” and sailed that for
3 ½ years, eventually selling out.
On the death of his brother Mr. Dean
took charge of' the property. Difficulty arose with shipowners and none would
stop at his wharf or warehouse except independent boats. He continued in
business for 2 years, and was postmaster until 1897 when he went to Onalaska
to build river boats.
He did return to work out the
details of a fishing device that combined the qualities of the purse seiner
with that of the pile trap and which was adaptable to either deep or shallow
water. The device was patented and was
considered by authorities to be the most valuable thing of its kind to have
been developed in this state in a decade and a half!
Mr. Dean never married. In politics a Republican.
CHARLES W. HODGE
A native of Puget Sound country, a
large poultry man of Skagit Co., Born in Bellingham October 22, 1868, the 5th
of 8 children of Watson and Jennie Hodge.
The elder Hodge a native of Burlington, Conn. started for the Pacific
Coast when a young man. He came around
the Horn and was ship wrecked on the coast of Panama some 300 miles from a
shipping point. In company with another
man he purchased a horse for the transportation of their belongings but the
partner stole the horse as well as Mr. Hodges boots. Forcing the unlucky to go
in sock feet. This was not the only
unpleasant experience of this eventful trip.
At one place Mr. Hodge was arrested by the Mexicans as a suspicious
character and held for 1 month.
Eventually however he arrived in California. He was soon drawn into the gold excitement at Cariboo, B.C. and spent
6 years there, doing well. Thence to
Bellingham where he engaged in business for a time and later moved to Edison
where he pre-empted 160 acres. He held this for 6
years- the location of the town. He
sold this, went to Samish Island and took a homestead of 80 acres, later held
by his heirs. He died in 1905.
Charles W. Hodge attended school to age
14 then went to work in a logging camp in the vicinity of Edison. He followed logging at various points along
the sound for 22 years before taking up farming.
In 1895 Mr. Hodge married Miss
Alice Hansen, daughter of Wm. and Jennie Hansen. The father born in Norway but came to the United States in 1853
and soon took up residence in the Pacific Northwest. He lived in Skagit Co. to 1898, farming on the Samish River. Later moving to Tacoma. Mrs. Hansen a native of British Columbia was
the mother of 14 children of whom Mrs. Hodge was the 10th. The Charles Hodges had 6 children... Herbert, Douglas, Lydia,
Ivan, Stanley and Glen.
Watson Hodge’s wife had been stolen
from the Blackfoot tribe of Montana.
JAMES
T. SQUIRES SR.,
Born in Smith Co. Tennessee,
the son of James and Amelia (Jones). His father had ambitions to become a
physician but because of exigencies of war, and efforts to regain lost
fortunes, died Dec. 1875. His mother
had died in July of that year. The
young son was orphaned and adrift at age 8.
He worked on a Mississippi plantation for several years and then went to
Napa Co. California, working
in the vineyards for a year, thence to British Columbia. In 1891 he came to
Edison with neither friend or acquaintance and 35 cents in his pocket. He worked as a laborer on a farm for a year
and & half , then leased 40 acres
and began cultivating the soil on his own.
In 1898 he 245 acres of school land and went into business raising oats,
diking 80 acres of marsh land included in the tract.
November 20, 1895 Mr. Squires married
Miss Theodosia E. Giles, daughter of R.J. Russell Giles of Tennessee who had
come to Skagit Co. in 1891. To them were born Theodora, James Jr. , Mary Gladys
and Floyd.
Mr. Squires died Feb. 9, 1960 and Mrs.
Squires on April 4, 1936.
See attached Samish Island map.
(Recorded by) Evelyn (Hopley) Clift
(Mrs. D. A. Hopley)
These notes of family record are copied from Aunt Eva
(Van Wingerden's) Bible, July 26, 1964.
Faustula W. Hopley
Born in Winchester, Mass. September 1, 1856
Hattie E. Hopley
Born in W;nchester, Mass November 24, 1859
Wilbur 3. Hopley
Born in Winchester, Mass. July 16, 1862
A. Lincoln Hopley
Born in Winchester, Mass. January 20, 1865
Harvey C. Hopley
Born in Winchester, Mass. April 24, 1867
Eva G. Hopley
Born in Winchester, Mass. September 24, 1869
George Colcord Hopley
Born in Evans, Colorado October 8, 1872
These notations of death are made:
Harvey C. Hopley
3 months - Died in Winchester, Mass. July 5, 1867
John Hopley
Died in Santa Clara, California, December 25, 1877
Faustula W. Hopley
21 years - Died in Auburn, Washington March 26, 1887 Married name not
given.
A.Lincoln Hopley
22 years - Died at Samish, Washington August 26, 1888 of Typhoid
Wilbur J. Hopley
55 year. - Died at Samish, Washington March 13, 1917 of drowning
Georgiana E. Hopley
(mother)
76 years - Died in Seattle, Washington August 6, 1909
Harriet E. Zeller
89 years - Died at Bow, Washington April 17, 1948
Eva Van Wingerden
90 years - Died in Bellingham, Washington October II, 1959
John Hopley and Georgiana E. Colcord
Married in Winchester, Mass. November 23, 1851 by Rev.
Geo. Damon
George Eckenberger, born December 23, 1843
Elizabeth Eckenberger born July 4, 1865.
Joined
in Holy Matrimony, Jun 5, 1865.
Children born to them:
Fredrick, December 9, 1868
Lucy, February 17, 1870
Henereta, April 20, 1873
Louisa, July 5, 1866
Martha, September 9, 1874
George, April 26, 1877
Mary, March 9-
John Lewis, December 24,
1880
Deaths recorded as:
Louisa, August 5, 1866
Henereta, August 2, 1873
Mary, September 2, 1872
Lucy, December 27, 1915
Elizabeth (mother),
September 4, 1917
George, November 9, 1929
George (father), November
25, 1929
Fredrick Charles, October
10, 1935
Martha, September 24, 1952
John, June 24, 1948