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Wauna couple spend ‘retirement’ serving others
By Linda Anderson
KP News
With a long history on the Peninsula and surrounding
area, Ron and Jan Coen are retired, yet still serving
their community. The Wauna couple are quite familiar to
people in the Gig Harbor area, where they are among the
biggest supporters of the F.I.S.H. food bank.
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Ron and Jan Coen have been instrumental in
the
success of F.I.S.H. food bank.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
Born in Indiana, Ron moved to the
Minter area with his family when his father took a job
at the Navy shipyard in Bremerton. After graduating, Ron
joined the Navy, in which he served for 26 years. His
assignments included the aircraft carriers
Constellation, America and the Kitty Hawk. He served
during the Viet Nam conflict, with his ship based in
Japan. Jan Coen remembers many interesting tidbits of
information, such as when airplanes needed repair, the
Navy utilized a Japanese manufacturing plant to produce
needed parts, which would have otherwise taken valuable
time to be sent front the States. Ron retired from the
Navy and became a bishop’s assistant in the Lutheran
Church. During a reorganizing process, he became a
regional coordinator, covering Washington, Oregon, Idaho
and Alaska. He currently works for the Lutheran
Insurance Co., which is a fraternal organization serving
widows and orphans. Ron’s job involves deciding the best
allocation of money for nonprofit use to help others.
While living in San Diego in the
early ‘70s, where her husband was stationed with the
Navy, Jan served as the social concerns chairman of her
church. One of her opportunities was to work with other
churches in the area to provide help for those in need.
Jan’s uncle was the original owner
of the former Pearl’s Restaurant in Purdy, where The
Beach House is now located. Her father worked at the
Navy shipyard until the Depression, and then logged in
Seabeck. Jan remembers an obstinate donkey that was used
to pull the logs out. The donkey took advantage of every
opportunity to walk away from the job site and return
home. Later on, Jan’s father bought the Standard
Station, which is now Chevron and located below the
Peninsula High School. Her mother’s family came from
Illinois, through Canada, and settled into farming near
Pt. Defiance.
Jan says that with family history
in the area, there are endless stories of interest and
enjoyment. “We could fill a book,” she said.
Of her travels with her husband,
Jan says her favorite foreign assignment was Japan,
where they spent four years and where their son was
born. Ron’s love for history enamored him with such
places as Turkey, particularly Istanbul.
While her husband served his
country, Jan enjoyed her role as homemaker and mother of
four: three girls and a boy. Both Jan and Ron now
consider themselves professional grandparents, enjoying
nine grandchildren, only two of which are boys.
In 1975, the Coens returned to the
Peninsula. With her experience and heart for helping
others, Jan began seeking out organizations and
ministries in the area with the resources to accomplish
her mission. Research revealed that the greatest need at
the time was transportation. So, organizing such
established groups as Associated Ministries, police and
fire departments, and local churches, Jan made
transportation available for appointments, shopping,
translation and other services, and supported the Wauna
Food Bank, until it moved off the Peninsula in the late
‘70s.
Jan first became acquainted with
F.I.S.H., an international help organization, when she
came across a brochure while in Japan with her husband.
Jan was able to start a F.I.S.H. group here. The
familiar help organization, which serves both Gig Harbor
and Key Peninsula residents, is now housed in Gig
Harbor. Jan serves as president of the board and runs
the food bank. She expresses that she is both thrilled
and grateful for the “high caliber of people who
volunteer.” The couple have been instrumental in the
organization’s growth, working extra hard to find its
current location after outgrowing the previous one.
Neither Ron nor Jan have any
immediate plans of giving up their work in serving their
community, and say they find great pleasure and
satisfaction in helping others.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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