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FROM PIONEER STOCK
Three generations of Johnsons
By Colleen Slater
KP News
O’Gust (Olaf August) Johnson left
his wife and small daughter in Sweden to seek a fortune
in the United States. He worked in the silver mines in
Alaska after the Gold Rush, and earned enough to buy
land and send for his family, but on the way back to
Seattle, someone stole his moneybag while he slept.
Johnson never got off the boat, but returned to the
mines to earn the money all over again.

The 1941
Thanksgiving at the Johnson grandparents' home.
Left to right, standing, O'Gust and Hilda
Johnson, Vernal Hyde,
Ruth Johnson, Jeanette Anderson, Edyth Jphnson,
Grandma
Strom, Stanley Anderson. Standing
children: David and Karen
Anderson Sitting: Esther Johnson, Don
Johnson, Ernie
Johnson, Loren Hyde. Photo courtesy
Johnson Family |
Johnson had learned some English,
but wife Hilda had not. He had to leave her alone when
he went to work in Tacoma. The family story says she
asked him what she should do if someone came to the
door. He said, “Say you don’t speak English and I’m not
home.”
Sure enough, someone knocked on the
door. Hilda opened it, said, “You don’t speak English
and I’m not home!” The visitor departed.
Johnson, who wanted a farm in the
country, bought land about 1905. He raised chickens and
eggs. His sister, Bertha, and brothers Hilmer and John
arrived later.
Four sons were born: Ragner,
Ernest, George, and another who died young. Ragner,
tired of being called Rag changed his name to Rogner.
His first job, as a teen, was whistle punk with a steam
donkey, but he was around when horse logging was still
being done. He was the first bulldozer operator on the
peninsula, working for Davidson Logging Co.
Rogner was hired to do cleanup work
for Mr. Strom. When he went to collect his pay, he met
Strom’s daughter, Edyth. She moved to Longbranch from
Dabob on her 16th birthday. They were married for nearly
40 years, and raised three children, Esther, Bob, Phil,
and Dave.
Rogner and family were out of the
area during World War II, and when they returned, traded
their Longbranch house for his parents’ home, as Grandma
Johnson didn’t enjoy living by the water, where they’d
lived in the original Ulsh home.
Rogner partnered with logger John
Larson until the late 1950s, then started Johnson
Bulldozing Co., later changed to Lakebay Construction
Co. Sons Phil and Dave bought their dad out in 1975, and
continue to operate, mainly building bulkheads. Bob did
commercial fishing, then had a sawmill on the homes
property by the water. When bulkhead building required
removal of large trees, the logs were moved to Bob’s
mill for processing.
Esther, Phil, mother Edyth, and
cousin Beverly reminisced about the old days at Grandpa
Johnson’s farm.
“All the Swedes came out to make
hay,” said Beverly, “and Grandma cooked for everybody.
She had a copper washtub full of potatoes.”
On Sundays, everybody dressed up
and went on picnics. “People got together then,” said
Beverly.
Grandma started her lutefisk the
second week of December for the family Christmas Eve.
“It took six months to get all the tarnish off the
silver from the lutefisk,” Esther said. “The kids all
ate blutpalsa (blood sausage) until they were big enough
to know what it was made of, then they graduated to
potato palsa.”
Phil recalled watching his
grandfather stir a big pot on the stove, and asked what
it was. “Chocolate,” said Grandpa, and spooned out a
sample for Phil. “That’s the worst chocolate I’ve ever
tasted,” said Phil, and learned it was blutpalsa being
cooked.
“Grandpa was the most serious of
his family, but did have a sense of humor,” Esther said.
Farmer, logger, bulldozer
operators, three generations of Johnsons have made their
impact on the peninsula.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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