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Online Histories of Snohomish County
A History of the Jensen - Grimm Farm,
Snohomish County, Washington
First published in the Third Age News, June 2002
© by Louise Lindgren
The Jensen-Grimm Farm, just west of the Junction of I-5
and the Pioneer Highway, was founded in 1878 by Thomas Jensen, a carpenter
from Lowenstedt, Germany. It has received numerous awards through the years
including Dairy Family of the Year in 1968, a Century Farm Award in 1983,
the Washington Centennial Farm Award in 1989 and last year’s honor from
Snohomish County.
Jensen was 20 when he emigrated to America in 1869.
He spent several years at trade of carpentry in Louisiana and Iowa before
going to San Francisco. From there he came to the Puget Sound country in
1878 and, impressed with the potential of the land and climate, filed a
160 acre homestead claim. For several years he worked the claim during
spring and summers, spending his winters in San Francisco in order to earn
enough money to support himself and the claim.
In March 1886 he married Johanna M. Jens, also of German
heritage, and soon after, settled on their homestead. He had built and
lived in a small one-room cabin on the banks of the Stillaguamish River
and, in anticipation of marriage, built a small frame house for himself
and his bride. Still, the shock of the extremely primitive conditions
compared to life in San Francisco must have caused Johanna to wonder at
her choice once in a while. It’s clear from the prosperity that they soon
achieved, that she dove right in to the farm wife’s role, for it definitely
takes both husband and wife to make a success of such a venture.
Two daughters were born within 2 ½ years, Dora
and Martha. Jensen saw that a school was built, donating ¼
acre of his homestead to adjoin a similar donation from a next door neighbor
for the first Island School. A 2nd Island School was built a few
years later. The Jensen daughters were the complete class and the first
to graduate from eighth grade at Island School in 1904.
Unknown to the Jensen family, but critical to its future
was, a young fellow, William G. Grimm, from upstate New York who set out
for Alaska, having heard tales of the gold to be found there. He worked
his way across the country to Seattle where, in 1904, he had to stop to
earn money for the rest of the trip. With no farming experience,
he answered an ad in the paper to be the Jensen’s farm hand. He must
have been a quick learner, for after two years of Grimm’s help, Jensen
leased the north 80 acres to him.
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It wasn’t long before Jensen built a third large home
on the south 80 acres across the Arlington-Silvana road which bisected
the homestead. He and his wife planted pear and prune trees, lining both
sides of the road. By 1906 the farm had grown to 200 acres with nearly
a third under cultivation. Back then, all clearing was done by hand and
there was a forest of stumps to pull out and burn. In addition to
land-clearing, planting crops, and building a home, the Jensens had 50
head of cattle to care for, a team of oxen, and a horse for the girls to
ride and to pull the family buggy. |
Not only was Grimm learning about farming, but courting
too, for in January 1907 Grimm married Dora Jensen and they began their
married life in the same small frame house that Jensen had built for his
San Francisco bride. Three years later, Will Grimm bought the 80 acres
he had been leasing and built a large dairy barn, horse barn, pig shed,
chicken house and other out-buildings. His dairy barn was equipped with
one of the first milking machines in the county. He also built a large
home to accommodate a family which eventually included six children.
In 1917 farmers of the valley experienced severe hardships
in marketing and expanding their dairy products. Jensen was already active
in the cooperative movement to solve agricultural problems, serving as
president of the board of both the Silvana and Arlington cooperative stores.
He had helped found the Arlington Creamery Association and served as president
during the early 1900s. The Arlington Times reported, “In politics he often
could count more enemies than friends, a very high recommendation in view
of the fact that most of the ideas he favored have long since been enacted
into law.”
Inspired by his father-in-law’s efforts, Grimm helped
found the Snohomish County Dairymen’s Assoc. (eventually named Darigold),
and was elected to be its first president. Later he remembered, “They decided
they needed a manager and talked me into taking it for a little while.”
A “little while” stretched from 1920-1946. Grimm laid down a couple
of rules which have guided the Association ever since: make the best product
it is possible to make and get the producer as much money as you can. A
Darigold publication states, “The problems and pitfalls confronting a cooperative
business would have discouraged most men, but not Will Grimm. He
had the welfare of dairymen of all Snohomish County at stake and he refused
to desert them in their time of need.”
| In 1924 Grimm decided it was impossible to be a full-time
farmer and also serve as manager of the Dairymen’s Association. Johanna
Jensen had died in 1921, leaving her husband in failing health in the big
house on the south eighty. Therefore in 1924, after selling the north eighty
acres, Will and Dora Grimm and their five children moved across the road
into the Jensen’s home, where another girl was born to them. The patriarch
of the family, Thomas Jensen, finally died in 1927. |
 |
Grimm spent hours driving forth and back to his office
in Everett during the week. Before and after work and on weekends
he continued the land-clearing on the forested clay-loam soil that Jensen
had spent so many years on. The Evergreen Fair tabloid of August 1983 reported,
“His children remember him rising at 4:00 a.m. in the summers to work among
the stumps, then driving 20 miles to his office in Everett. Evenings,
after dinner, he would be out among the stumps again through the remaining
hours of daylight. They also remember being able to get out of doing
the dishes in order to help with the setting and filing of saw teeth or
turning the whetstone as their father sharpened the axes and other hand
tools he used.” After retiring from the Dairy Association in 1946, Grimm
continued digging out huge old stumps. He spent many hours making toys
and trinkets from the long-buried stumps for his grandchildren’s pleasure.
In 1954 he finally made the long-deferred trip to Alaska with a friend,
50 years after he originally planned it.
The farm is now owned by Grimm’s second son, George, who
works with his son Bob to keep the farm producing field corn, peas, vegetable
seed crops. Thomas and Johanna Jensen would be happy to know that their
large house, with the beautiful catalpa tree out front, is now home to
their great-grandson and his family. And, that the tradition for hard work
and caring for the land lives on.
Photos courtesy of the Grimm Family For more history of historic farms of
Snohomish County, click
here.
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