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Key Peninsula sweethearts love to celebrate
By Jeanette Brown
Special to the
KP News
What would Albert Krause think
about the small buffalo herd peacefully grazing along
the fence line on a 10-acre spread now known as
Maplewood Ranch, part of a new Longbranch subdivision
located just off 40th Street? Moreover, what would he
think about the Key Peninsula couple who now reside in
the newly remodeled farm home (replete with gated
driveway and professional landscaping) that he
originally built in the mid-1950s, a piece of Longbranch
legend that some locals still refer to as the “Old
Krause Homestead”?
Most likely Krause, the son of
famous Key Peninsula pioneers, would give a big “thumbs
up” to the buffalo, once found in abundance on the great
plains of the American West, and now making a grand and
rapid comeback in Washington. He would likely be quite
taken with these two business owners and lifetime Gig
Harbor/Key Peninsula-area residents who seem to embody
the “old pioneer spirit,” embracing family values of
yore and a strong work ethic.

High school
sweethearts Roy and Robin Ward open their
beautiful property to friends and family for
weddings and other
events. Their daughter’s wedding was held right
below, on the
grassy area.
Photo by Mindi La Rose |
The owners of Maplewood Ranch, Roy
and Robin Ward, are Peninsula High School sweethearts
who decided to move out to the relatively new
subdivision from their small farm in Key Center in order
to remodel and restore their newly purchased 1950s farm
house and barn. Of course, they brought their two
daughters with them and have been making changes at
Maplewood Ranch ever since.
The Wards are now empty nesters,
and true to their pioneer roots, Roy and Robin’s family
tradition of hard work and strong family ties are firmly
entrenched on both the Key and Kitsap peninsulas,
anchored by their large, extended families.
Roy’s grandparents, Burt and
Phyllis Ward, homesteaded just off the Key Peninsula
Highway in the 1920s — not too far “down the peninsula”
from Key Center. Roy’s maternal grandfather, Howard
Sigmund, was a local logger and sawmill owner, and Roy’s
mother, Dorothy, was one of nine Sigmund children. Roy
estimates he has more than 100 first cousins living in
the area.
Not too long after Roy Ward and
Dorothy Sigmund graduated from Peninsula High School in
the early 1950s, they were married. Roy Jr. grew up in
Rosedale; his future bride, Robin, resided just a short
distance away in Minter.
Roy is proud of the fact that their
daughters, Kate and Ashlee, are the third generation of
Wards to graduate from Peninsula High School. Therefore,
it should come as no surprise, that in addition to
owning and operating Maplewood Construction for the past
25 years, Roy also works at Peninsula High School as an
assistant coach for the girls’ fast pitch softball team,
where he also had the opportunity to coach his youngest
daughter, Ashlee, a big fan of girls’ fast pitch. Ashlee
now attends Tacoma Community College and works part-time
alongside her dad, mom and older sister in their
business offices located in Rosedale.
Older daughter, Kate, was married
at Maplewood Ranch after graduating from Eastern
Washington University, and later designed a Website for
the ranch that features her recent wedding. The Wards
have made many improvements to their home and grounds
over the past nine years, including opening up the view
of Filucy Bay and adding a magnificent water feature and
a 1950s-style, covered wraparound deck with a peaked
roof to augment the historical features of the home.
Right after the Wards bought their
new place, they started holding family reunions, and
gave it the name of Maplewood Ranch. It wasn’t long
before family and friends began asking to use their
“entertainment-friendly” estate and grounds to host
their own celebrations and events. The buffalo herd that
graze peacefully on the grounds are an extra added
attraction, and buffalo steaks are served up frequently
on the large outdoor barbeque.
The Wards also had the old barn
remodeled; the main floor features a large and efficient
country kitchen for cooking up those timeless family
reunion specialty dishes. The second floor hosts a
private room with bath and also features a balcony with
spectacular views of the bay and the ranch.
The Wards have always enjoyed
entertaining their family and friends and this June, Roy
and Robin will be hosting the 50th wedding anniversary
celebration of her parents, Dick and Jodi Rasmussen.
The couple has seen many changes in
the area over the past two to three decades, but they
have learned to embrace them and plan to celebrate and
reminisce about all those changes frequently with their
family and friends at the Maplewood Ranch.
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