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FROM PIONEER STOCK
Kerry Jamieson — Roots go deep
By Colleen Slater
KP News
Kerry
Jamieson’s roots reach back four and five generations to
families who settled in Vaughn over 100 years ago.
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Jamieson |
Dudley
Harriman of Maine traveled up Puget Sound in 1888 to
find homestead land. He bought 160 acres on Case Inlet,
stretching south a mile from the Vaughn sand spit. He
deeded the land to son Louis, who arrived soon after
with his wife, Mamie, and sons, Earl and Glen.
Louis and
Mamie built their home and large barn on Vaughn Bay,
overlooking the sandspit. They planted the first
vineyard in the Vaughn area, a large orchard and garden.
Their
son, Glen, operated a series of boats from Vaughn from
1916 until 1936. “Dora,” “Seawolf,” and then “Loren”
carried local produce, eggs, butter, and seafood to
Olympia, as well as passengers, mail, and other needed
freight.
Glen and
Esther Austin, childhood friends at Vaughn, married
while he was stationed in San Diego in the Navy. Her
father, Henry Austin began his working career as a cabin
boy in the English Navy at age 11. He caught yellow
fever in South America, jumped ship on the East Coast of
the United States, and joined the U.S. Navy. He retired
on medical disability some months later and traveled to
Chicago. Austin acquired some tattoos in his naval
travels, including a full-rigged, three-mast ship under
full sail on his chest.
He met
Margaret Mary O’Neill, a nanny from Ireland, in a park.
They married and headed west, arriving at Stansbury Lake
(later Lewis, and now Lake Holiday) by 1890. The
Jamiesons own a rocker the Austins bought in a
second-hand shop in Chicago.
In 1894,
Austin purchased acreage from John High, previous
Harriman land. Mamie Harriman and Maggie Austin became
neighbors, friends, and midwives to each other.
Maggie
Austin preferred clear spring water to her well water
for washing clothes. In good weather, she loaded her
laundry atop a horse for the half-mile trip down to
Harriman’s beach. She built a big beach fire to heat
water for washing. The horse carried the damp clothes
back to be hung to dry.
The
Austins agreed to pay High from half the proceeds of the
farm each year until paid in full. When daughter Ellen
contracted tuberculosis and died after birthing a
premature daughter, High sent a sympathetic letter to
the family and cancelled the remaining debt.
Glen and
Esther built their first home overlooking Vaughn Bay,
between the two sets of parents. When daughter Margaret
was 5, the family moved up the bay to the old Bassett
home (now Shirleys), and later, built a home on the
southern end of the Harriman property (now Taylors).
Jamieson,
son of Margaret, attended Vaughn school through third
grade, then the family moved to Artondale and bought
property on Wollochet Bay. Jamieson’s father barged a
40- by 70-foot rooming house from Steilacoom, which they
remodeled into a home. Jamieson said it was fun to have
so many bedrooms to choose from.
By fifth
grade, they moved back to Vaughn, but lived in Gig
Harbor when Jamieson was in high school.
He always
had an interest in boats, although never lived on the
waterfront as an adult. Jamieson operated a tugboat for
awhile, towing logs from Shelton for the Johnson
Brothers of Lakebay. While in high school, he built a
Criscraft 13-foot runabout. The transom included was the
wrong size, and he found the boat quickly turned end to
end. Jamieson has stories to tell of his fun with that.
His current boat is an “electric” yacht he converted
when the engines needed replacing.
Jamieson’s wife, Helen, picked strawberries for Elsie
Olson soon after moving to Vaughn. She was slow, but a
clean picker. Olson put her behind the fastest picker —
Jamieson, who picked 60 flats a day.
A former
cabinet maker, Jamieson is an environmental specialist
and lab technician for Holroyd, a sand and gravel
company.
He moved
a lot in his growing up years, but he’s stayed in one
place the last 31, planting his own roots firmly on the
peninsula.
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