Last alarm called
for Ross Bischoff
By Hugh McMillan
KP News
The Last Alarm was sounded
for Ross Bischoff, following the benediction
from Pastor Heinz Malon, on May 17. Pagers
sounded from the belts of Key Peninsula
firefighters stationed around the sanctuary of
the Key Peninsula Lutheran Church.
Loud-and-clear came the dispatcher’s voice, “The
Key Peninsula Fire Department calls for the last
alarm for firefighter Ross Bischoff. May his
spirit continue to watch over us.”

Ross Bischoff at his
farm at last year’s Harvest Fest
Photo by Karina Whitmarsh |
The dispatcher’s microphone
remained open for a few seconds, a routine
procedure to allow for secondary instructions or
a reply. When there was no reply, all pagers
were clicked closed; the firefighters filed out
and returned to duty. The Last Alarm is a
traditional ceremony reserved for firefighters
and is only used when the family is comfortable
including it as part of the memorial. “In
working with the family, they felt that it would
be appropriate,” said Fire Chief Tom Lique whose
father, Earl, served as a responder with
Bischoff in the 1970s.
The sea of parked vehicles
surrounding the Key Peninsula Lutheran Church
were evidence of the love and esteem in which
Bischoff was held by his many friends,
neighbors, and family members. The community
leader, who was friend and helper to so many,
lost his battle with cancer on April 29. An
estimated 250 people attended his celebration of
life. The services were conducted by Malon in
the church that Bischoff was instrumental in
designing and building; he was a charter member
there. The sanctuary was festooned with quilted
and paper swarms of butterflies in memory of
Bischoff’s annual Easter release of hundreds of
the winged beauties.

Shawn Yanity,
representing the Stillaguamish Tribe
of Indians,
in honor of the tribe’s relationship with Ross Bischoff,
presented Bischoff’s daughter, Carol
Bischoff
Larson,
a special
tribal blanket. Photo by Hugh
McMillan |
Following services, those who had come to honor
him gathered in the church’s McColley Hall,
where memories of Bischoff’s life were shared
over refreshments.
“The Key Peninsula has lost a great pioneer and
a hands-on worker who did all he could to better
serve his friends and neighbors in the
community,” said friend Andy Isaksen.
Always ready to serve, Bischoff was elected to
the Key Peninsula Parks and Recreation
District’s Board of Commissioners and, when that
body was replaced by the current Key Peninsula
Metro Parks District, was again elected
commissioner.
He and his wife, Joyce, who died in 2005, had a
cider press in a building on Hoff Road in Home
where they created fresh cider bearing
Bischoff's Lakebay Farm label. Their cider,
honey, jams, jellies, and pies were coveted by
many who snatched them up at farmers markets,
the Key Peninsula Community Fair, the
Renaissance Faire, and the Peninsula High School
annual WinterFest. They conducted tours of the
press room for students from Evergreen
Elementary and every kid left with a free bottle
of freshly squeezed cider.
For a time, they raised mink on their property
on Hoff Road and earned the displeasure of some
neighbors, who were not pleased with the odor of
the beasts. “Their mink farming days came during
the mid- to late-‘80s and I can’t imagine any of
the neighbors along Hoff Road not remembering
the awful smell the mink produced,” said his
daughter, Carol Bischoff Larson.
Bischoff gave his time as a volunteer with
several organizations, among them his church,
the Peninsula High School’s Future Farmers of
America, the 4-H, Key Peninsula Business
Association, the Renaissance Faire, and was
involved with a number of local farmers markets.
He was a moving force in the creation of the Gig
Harbor Farmers Market, served as a volunteer
firefighter with the Key Peninsula Fire
Department, and was interviewed for the
department’s added commissioner position this
year.

An avid supporter of local
agriculture, Bischoff was known for
his
pumpkins and cider, among other
things. Photo by Hugh McMillan |
In 1981, Bischoff was one of two who survived a
primary election for fire commissioner but did
little to win the general election. On meeting
the person who won the election, he asked, “Do
you smoke?” He then explained he knew that the
other two commissioners smoked, as did the
chief, and that he figured he would live at
least 10 years longer by staying out of the
smoke-charged commissioners’ meetings, so he
decided not to really seek the office.
Neighbor Lori Deacon Boll, who was a student of
Bischoff’s at Peninsula High School, said, “He
was the best teacher I ever had. He made me feel
I could accomplish things that I might not even
have attempted without his encouragement.”
Bischoff was an honorary member of the
Stillaguamish Tribe. Shawn Yanity, chairman of
the Stillaguamish Tribe and tribal fisheries
manager, presented Larson a ceremonial blanket.
He explained, “In our culture, gifting is an
important part of our ceremonies and custom.
Blankets are one of the gifts that are special.
We wrap blankets on loved ones, guests, leaders,
witnesses called at ceremonies, or honoring
someone. Last year, at my parents’ annual
barbecue, I wanted to share our culture and
language of the Stillaguamish with the guests. I
also wanted to honor Ross for his friendship,
leadership, and as a very respected elder. I
spoke of my appreciation for his help keeping me
in school and graduating, his kindness, his love
to teach. He helped me get interested in
fisheries, where I have worked for several
years.”
Yanity held the blanket and said, “I wanted to
honor him and wrap him in this blanket. The
blanket is medicine for him.”

Bischoff in his
rhubarb garden in June 2005.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |