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FROM PIONEER STOCK
Russ Schillinger, victor logger and farmer
By Colleen Slater
KP News
Russell (Russ) Schillinger lives on
the land where he was born in 1930, soon after his
parents, William and Frances, moved from Edgewood, Wash.
The elder Schillingers met and married in North Dakota
and headed west to Washington in the early 1920s. They
arrived in Victor with children Helen, Bob and Ron.
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Victor school,
1-8 grades:
Standing, left to right:
Don Dahl, Russ
Schillinger, Audrey Hanson,
Doris Hager, teacher Miss Ahre, Ron Schillinger,
Ed Edwards, Keith
Archer.
Sitting:
Ken Ester, Tom Archer, Ken
Archer, Jim Dahl, Dale Hager
Photo courtesy Russ Schillinger |
William (Bill) planted berries and
grapes on his acreage at Victor, overlooking North Bay.
The property had originally belonged to the Stock
family, and the Schillingers’ grapes were sold to
Stock’s winery. Frances also picked grapes with other
women on Harstine Island for wineries located there.
The boys helped build the barn and
other farm buildings, created a trout pond, and learned
to plow. Russ was 14 when Bob Davidson of Vaughn hired
him to plow. Davidson picked him up after school, and
Russ either rode home with a Davidson worker who lived
in Victor, or hitch-hiked.
The Schillingers turned to dairy
farming in the early ’40s. The boys delivered raw milk
to local stores and to people along the way, in Victor,
Allyn, and Vaughn.
When milk required pasteurization,
Russ took the milk to Key Center, where local dairymen
dropped off their 10-gallon cans for Darigold.

Russ Schillinger, ca 1953
Photo courtesy Russ Schillinger |
Bill switched from dairy to beef
cattle in 1953. Russ’ daughter, Karen, and husband, Tom
Johnson, who live in the remodeled farmhouse, still have
a few head.
By 1968, the Schillingers added
Christmas trees to their farm to help pay higher taxes.
Russ started first grade at the
one-room school near the bay in Victor. In 1942, when
local schools combined, he rode the bus to Vaughn. He
was part of the first graduating class of Peninsula High
School, where he was student body president, received an
“inspirational award,” and lettered in all three sports
— football, basketball, and baseball.
Russ and his brothers played
hardball on a team comprised of Victor, Vaughn, Allyn
and Belfair players. They took the championship one
year. He said it was Hank Niemann’s home run that won
the final game. Hank pitched right handed, but batted
left-handed, and hit the pitched knuckleball clear out
of the field.
After graduation, Russ joined the
Naval Air Reserve, but didn’t have active duty until
1953, when he was stationed in Hawaii, and where he
married Patti in 1954.
Russ met Patti when he was helping
deliver milk. She was about 10, visiting an older sister
in Belfair. Russ was a few years older.
Russ logged and did construction
work, starting with Harmon Van Slyke and Wes Davidson,
but branching out on his own before long.
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Pioneer
Stock Wanted
If you are
or know someone who
is a second, third, or fourth generation
person living on the Key Peninsula,
please let us know so we can
feature this person in our Pioneer
Stock series.
Email
news@keypennews.com,
call 884-4699 or write to:
KP News, PO Box 3, Vaughn WA 98394. |
In 1980, he was thinning Department
of Natural Resources forests and chipping
nonmerchantable timber for paper mills. Within a few
years, he formed Schillinger Enterprises, Inc., to cover
his logging, construction work, and Christmas tree
farming. Russ was president, Patti secretary, and now
son-in-law Tom is president.
Russ and Bob Dressel,
self-proclaimed timber industry “junk dealers,” started
a chipping mill in Belfair. They gathered or bought all
the “ugly” logs nobody else wanted, and turned them into
high-quality chips for paper mills. The paper mills
couldn’t get enough chips in the early ‘80s, so the
Schillinger-Dressel North Mason Fiber Co. did well at
recycling wood waste.
They designed a hydraulic stump
splitter on an excavator, and Russ says they were too
busy to patent it. Within six or eight years, all the
big companies had them.
Russ officially retired in 1995,
including having served 30 years as a volunteer fireman
in Victor’s District 5 Station. He and Patti golf as
much as they can, at nearby Lakeland Village, or points
farther south.
The couple enjoys their 30-year-old
hillside home, the view of the bay, and bald eagles that
cruise by.
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News, all rights reserved.
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