|
Site founded Sept. 1, 2000. We passed 1.25 million page views on Nov. 1, 2006 These home pages remain free of any charge. We need donations or subscriptions/gifts. Please pass on this website link to your family, relatives, friends and clients. |
|
Skagit River JournalSubscribers Edition Stories & Photos The most in-depth, comprehensive site about Skagit County Covers from British Columbia to Puget Sound. Counties covered: Skagit, Whatcom, Island, San Juan, Snohomish & BC. An evolving history dedicated to committing random acts of historical kindness |
810 Central Ave., Sedro-Woolley, Washington, 98284Home of the Tarheel Stomp Mortimer Cook slept here & named the town Bug |
|
John Flood Conrad [This is a profile of John Conrad and his family. At the end, see the links to the yearly obituary notes that Conrad wrote.]
|
Present at the meeting Friday were Minnie [Lederle] Batey, Filomene Vogel, Ethel [Van Fleet] Harris, Sophie Erickson, Eugennie Bergstedt, Alice Robinson, Elgie Lillpop, Ella Day, Anna Hoehn, Mrs. Soper, Susan Taylor, Bertha Carroll Davison, Eva Beebe, Reina Adams, Emmilie Duffy, Grace Cochrum, Emma Hart, Bessie Bardan, Belle Seidell, all of this territory; Maude Vanderford, Ettie Meyers and Elizabeth Roughton, all of Lyman, Lexie Sharp of LaConner and Nora Hastie of Mount Vernon.Charles Conrad My father, Charles Conrad, when 12 years of age, an only child and with his father dead, left Sweden in 1873 accompanied by his aunt Emma. Plans were for him to send for his mother later but she died within a year.
Charles and his aunt first stopped at Ottumwa, Iowa, where an uncle, John Anderson, and wife had resided for five years. With their family of four children, they all proceeded to San Francisco and then by S.S. Prince Albert to Victoria, B.C. where they landed in November 1873. [Ed. note: Ottumwa was the same town where Sedro-Woolley pioneer Harry L. Devin lived in the same period.]
Among the passengers on this boat was the Wallace family, of which a son, Irwin, still lives west of Sedro-Woolley and he still recalls the trip. On this boat's return voyage south she was wrecked and many lives were lost.
To travel to Port Townsend for immigration reentry and then to Whidbey Island, a sloop had to be hired for the crossing of the straits and inlet. A wagon provided passage across the island and then another sloop took them across Skagit Bay and up the north fork of the Skagit river five miles, where an aunt, Matilda, and uncle, Magnus Anderson, lived, the latter a settler of 1869.
The only school available in this crude land was organized at the Polson home a couple of miles away and Alfred Polson, now of Mount Vernon, was one of the students. Later my father attended Alden Academy of Anacortes, his roommate being a neighbor, Will Cornelius, father of P.A. Cornelius of Mount Vernon.
Father worked on different farms, including that of J.O. Rudene, pioneer legislator, on the Puget Mill company tract north of LaConner. Another hired man was Peter Downey and when Mr. Rudene moved to Pleasant Ridge to marry Mrs. John Cornelius, a widow, and run her ranch, the two hired men rented and divided the Puget farm, this in the year 1884.
Previous to this, father had also farmed the pioneer Calhoun place one year, in company with Charles Elde and it was on this farming operation that the late Charles Wicker of Sedro-Woolley secured his first job in Skagit county, an experience he never forgot.
After 37 years around LaConner, 26 on the Puget farm, my father moved to the Conway vicinity, where he lived 36 years and passed away in 1946.
Three cousins, members of the pioneer trip out from Iowa in 1873, are still living: E.R. Anderson of Watsonville, California, (formerly of LaConner) who was a babe of one year on the trip; Jennie Anderson Peterson of Bellevue; and Judge Axel Anderson, Mountain Home, Idaho, who was seven years old on the journey.
Father preempted a homestead at Avon. He carried groceries home in a gunny sack through the marshland. When he went to dances he wore rubber boots and carried his dancing shoes under his arm. Even the horses had to be provided with large shoes to keep them from miring down in the swamp land while working. These shoes were made of Tules and were called Tuley shoes. Father used to shoot bear and other game as did all the pioneers.
|
|
This photo of a very long log on a tractor-trailer was taken sometime in the 1950s in front of John Conrad's service station on Highway 20, then known as the Burlington road |
|
|
|
|
|
Story posted April 1, 2002, updated Aug. 1, 2004 and Feb. 19, 2007 See this Journal website for a timeline of local, state, national and international events for years of the pioneer period. Did you enjoy this story? Remember, as with all our features, this story is a draft and will evolve as we discover more information and photos. This process continues until we eventually compile a book about Northwest history. Can you help? We welcome correction and criticism. Please report any broken links or files that do not open and we will send you the correct link. With more than 550 features, we depend on your report. Thank you. Read about how you can order CDs that include our photo features from the first five years of our Subscribers Edition. Perfect for gifts. Jones and Solveig Atterberry, NorthWest Properties Aiken & Associates: . . . See our websitePlease let us show you residential and commercial property in Sedro-Woolley and Skagit County 2204 Riverside Drive, Mount Vernon, Washington . . . 360 708-8935 . . . 360 708-1729 Schooner Tavern/Cocktails at 621 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, across from Hammer Square: www.schoonerwoolley.com web page . . . History of bar and building Oliver Hammer Clothes Shop at 817 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years. Joy's Sedro-Woolley Bakery-Cafe at 823 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years. Check out Sedro-Woolley First section for links to all stories and reasons to shop here firstor make this your destination on your visit or vacation. DelNagro Masonry Brick, block, stone — See our work at the new Hammer Heritage Square Are you looking to buy or sell a historic property, business or residence?We may be able to assist. Email us for details. Peace and quiet at the Alpine RV Park, just north of Marblemount on Hwy 20Park your RV or pitch a tent by the Skagit River, just a short drive from Winthrop or Sedro-Woolley |
|
|
Tip: Put quotation marks around a specific name or item of two words or more, and then experiment with different combinations of the words without quote marks. We are currently researching some of the names most recently searched for — check the list here. Maybe you have searched for one of them? |
|
|
![]() View My Guestbook Sign My Guestbook |
Mail copies/documents to Street address: Skagit River Journal, 810 Central Ave., Sedro-Woolley, WA, 98284. |