![]() The Women's Legacy Project of Snohomish County, Washington seeks to honor our foremothers by recording and sharing their personal histories, their ability to adapt to the forces of change and their constant vigilance as stewards of the diverse cultures of our society. |
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WLP Story Number 36 ~
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![]() By the fall
of 1891, there were enough children at the town site to
start a school. Temporary classrooms were set up in the Brue
Building on Everett Avenue. Eva’s best friend and playmate
was neighbor Gracie Spithill whose grandfather and
grandmother had homesteaded years before the city of Everett
was imagined. Gracie was part Scot and part Snohomish
Indian. While Eva was to live a long life, Gracie died as a
child. |
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Eva quickly learned to care for herself since her father was often at Monte Cristo and her mother was a midwife who sometimes was away for days delivering babies. Mary Jones trusted in home remedies and Eva continued to use her mother’s recipes throughout her life. She made her own cough syrup and remembered once making a salve that helped to save a young boy’s injured leg. When asked what ingredients she used, Eva replied “That’s a long story. We were standing on the ocean beach in Oregon. And we see something shining way out in the water. Well the tide was coming and that tin came to us and it was a jar of Stockholm tar. Of course it was runny and I didn’t know what to mix with it, so I got Vaseline and melted the Vaseline and mixed half and half and made a salve out of it. It was a gallon can and it lasted a long time.” |
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As a young woman, Eva was a telephone operator. It was here that she met James H. Davis, a lineman who came to town with a traveling work crew stringing telephone lines. Eva and James began dating and married in 1903. The couple lived in the Jones’s family home for four years and Eva gave birth to their first child, a daughter. The Davises eventually had a home of their own on riverside and a son was born. |
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In 1977 Eva was interviewed in her home by Margaret Riddle
and David Dilgard of the Everett Public Library and shortly before her death,
photographer Carolyn Kozo Cole took pictures of her [see photo to the right]. Eva described herself as a
“homebody”, a person who “didn’t neighbor much.” She was not involved in church
or club activities. Her life revolved instead around her home and her family.
Since arriving in Everett, she had lived in only two houses and both were on
Everett’s riverside. Her home was filled with treasures from the past including
cyanotype photos made by an aunt which were then printed on 4” x 5” pieces of
cloth and quilted as pillows. There are quite a lot of Everett pictures in
there,” Eva had said. “I’ve had those for years and years and years…..they never
fade.” When Eva reminisced, she occasionally pointed to an item that reminded
her of someone from the past, such as a clock that once belonged to early
pioneer and bicycle shop owner Arthur Baily.
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| Sources: Interview with Eva Jones Davis by David Dilgard and Margaret Riddle, July 25, 1977; Riddle, Margaret, “Oral History: Eva Jones Davis”, Journal of Everett and Snohomish County History, Vol. 5 (Everett, 1983) p. 23-31. | ||
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© 2006 Margaret Riddle All Rights Reserved |