Researcher traces paths of Swede-Finns to South Coast

By Howard Yune, Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 18, 2004 | 12 comment(s)

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In the mid-1840s, a Finnish ship ran aground on the Pacific Coast and stranded its crew thousands of miles from home. But several of the sailors made the best of their mishap, permanently settling in the territory that was to become the state of Oregon. Such was the unlikely beginning of a diaspora that, in time, sent more than 300,000 people to the United States from Finland, including more than 1,000 in Coos County alone.

Some 170 years later, a tall man with thinning blond hair sat at a microfilm machine at the North Bend Public Library, carefully scanning newspaper stories from 1915 and taking down all the Swedish- or Finnish-sounding names he could find. Seemingly a typical library visitor, he was, in fact, a Finnish visitor, a writer slowly uncovering his country's almost forgotten links to the Bay Area.

In the first week of May, Karl-Gustav Olin arrived in the Bay Area to pore through decades-old newspaper clippings and interview Finnish-American families now in their third and fourth generations. His research over two weeks in Oregon and Washington will supply the material for a planned book exploring the experience of Finns, especially the country's ethnic Swedes, in the Pacific Northwest: the latest in a series of 11 books the former journalist has penned about the lives of Swede-Finns abroad.

Olin's previous books have traced the history of Finnish and Swedish emigration, beginning with the Swedes' earliest New World colony, established in 1638 in the future Delaware. As he turned his attention to immigrant outposts in places as diverse as South Africa, Alaska and the Caribbean island of St. Bart's, he found each new book inspired the next - eventually leading him to Oregon.

"When I work on a project," said the 48-year-old said in his fluent, rapid-fire English, "I find interesting material which I put to work on another project."

Despite Coos County's small population, Olin found it a fertile area for his research, gleaning numerous Swedish-Finnish names from old books and papers and interviewing at least 10 families descended from immigrants. The picture painted by the information, he said, is that of a vibrant ethnic community, once the county's largest foreign-born group, that left its mark on the South Coast's timber, fishing and agricultural fields.

Economic opportunity in the New World combined with overcrowding and political turmoil at home to launch the Finnish exodus, according to Olin.

Advances in agriculture and public health allowed the Finnish birthrate to swell, leaving farms unable to support ever-growing families and leading some to seek their fortunes abroad. And as the logging and fishing industries thrived at the turn of the 20th century and provided Scandinavians with the carrot of jobs, Finns also sought to flee the stick of authoritarian rule by tsarist Russia, which aggressively drafted men from its then-colony into its army. (Finland did not win its independence until 1910.)

Becoming a lumberjack or fisherman often was the first step for newcomers to the Northwest who spoke no English, Olin said. Arriving at first mostly as single men - the author grinned as he produced long-ago classified advertisements from "America widows," Finnish wives searching for news of their husbands working overseas - the newcomers eventually arrived as families and even whole sections of villages. The Bay Area itself became the new home for many natives of Kokkola (known to ethnic Swedes as Gamlakarleby), to the point, according to Olin, it became known as "Little Kokkola."

While the author's plans include a name list of Finnish natives who moved to the Pacific Northwest, he emphasized his will be a human history rather than a sociological one, drawing mainly on the troves of information in the memories and stories of immigrants' grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

"I don't use graphs or statistics, anything like that," Olin said.

A typical story is the one shared by the wife of a grandson of Eric Enquist, a Swede-Finn who, as a 16-year-old, was enjoying a Midsummer Day swim in the village stream when a girl in a white dress strode by, dipping her bare feet into the water. He playfully splashed the girl and they smiled at each other - not to see each other again until seven years later, "at a Lutheran Church in Salt Lake City, of all places," Olin said, grinning.

Enquist soon realized the stranger was the same girl he met in their hometown, and they married soon afterward. They settled in the Cascade Locks, where he prospered as a fisherman collecting his catch with fish wheels set in the river.

Olin envisioned a book that brings to life the full range of the Finnish community's creations, including fisheries, farms along the Coos River, the Central Dock - even a social life that once supported two Finnish-American societies, the Star of Suomi and Order of Runeberg, that operated a temperance association, mutual-aid insurance company and the Suomi Hall (named for the Finnish-language term for Finland).

For members of the Brunell family, one of the 10 that Olin interviewed during his visit, the author's visit was a pleasant revival of ties to the old country that have not broken even over four generations.

"I'm proud of my heritage, proud to be a Swede-Finn," said Anna Brands, whose grandfather, Alfred Brunell, emigrated from Gamlakarleby/Kokkola in 1907 and founded the family farm that later became the nucleus of Brookmead Dairy and that now raises beef cattle. The Brunells continue to have more members of their extended family in Finland than the U.S., she added, and it was Olin's contact with some of those relatives that led to his interviewing her and her mother, Jeanette Brunell.

Even more illuminating - to Brands as well as Olin - was the writer's interview of another Swede-Finn descendant, Ruth Shutter, now 90.

"Ruth was friends with my grandparents, none of whom lived to be 60," she said. "She was so knowledgeable about the Swede-Finns in the community, so it was special to listen to her stories."

While immigrants and their children adopted the English language as their own and severed their linguistic ties to the home country, the popularity of English as the lingua franca of much of Europe actually makes it easier than before for immigrants' families to track their relatives across the Atlantic, and vice versa.

"We speak English much more than the old generation did," said Olin, "and now we can communicate again."

Though time and the absorption of Finnish emigrants into American society have effaced much of their ethnic identity, modern-day Finns remain interested in the lives of their former countrymen and their descendants, Olin declared.

"Everybody has somebody (in the family) who emigrated," he said. "It's a piece of family history in another part of the world."
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????????? wrote on Mar 20, 2008 8:31 PM:

Well this goes to show that this is the best coo's county can do.I can't see this lady getting 90 DAYS for helping a person murder another person.this makes me sick.

Unknown wrote on Mar 10, 2008 11:44 AM:

THAT WAS SO SAD!!!!!!!!!!!

Ray Doering wrote on Feb 20, 2008 1:54 PM:

More Port Information

Judy Reyes wrote on Aug 15, 2007 1:37 AM:

Hello My name is Judy Reyes I have looked on every web site for Coos county animal shelter & can not find it . I an looking for a small young female dog . a poodle or poodle mix or a cock a poo . I live in Albany Or, coos bay was our home for many years . We adopted a dog from coos counnty and had him for 15 yrs . we have a very nice home & all fenced . & have love to spare for animals . we have no other dogs & no children . I am retired & homr most of the time . Thanks for your help. E. Mail reyesletro 2@ aol.com Sincerely Judy Reyes

Community editor Hallie Winchell wrote on Jul 27, 2007 10:10 AM:

The Teen Idol contest was held at the Coos County Fair this week, as mentioned in the story above. The rest of the competition is scheduled to be held at the Egyptian Theatre in downtown Coos Bay starting again on Thursday, Aug. 2. - Community Editor Hallie Winchell

Dorothy wrote on Jul 26, 2007 6:13 PM:

We, my husband and sister-in-law and I went to the Egyptian Theater tonight to watch the "Teen Idol." NO ONE was there and there were no messages regarding this program??? What's the deal here? We thought as stated in your web site above that it would be there on Thursday evenings at least through mid-August.. I look forward to hearin from you

Clint Guevara wrote on Jul 23, 2007 10:46 PM:

It is an honor to particapate in Teen Idol, I'm having the time of my life. I get really excited when I see the turn out of people, friends and family at the Egyptian theatre. Thanks for your support! See you at the fair. Peace Out :)

Star Moralez wrote on Jul 17, 2007 7:11 PM:

Teen Idol is one of the best experiences Ive ever had and I hope that everyone gets out here and supports us at the Egyptian this Thursday!!! *Rock On* ~Star Moralez~

anamaria wrote on May 25, 2007 5:06 PM:

It doesn't matter what the administration says about what we've been hurt by or not hurt by!! There is such a thing as a RIPPLE effect.Because we lost a substantial source of revenue,Not only with the 2006 closure but the early closure in June of 2005 we all have incurred numerous bills that literally have many SERIOUS fisherman on the ropes!!Meaning those of us that earn every dime we make from Commercial fishing!Yes we were eligible for loans from the S.B.A. but thats just another Bill every month that we don't need!!It's kinda funny that they completely shut off the fishery for part of one year and totally for the next,but now we have all this time and unrestricted area to fish for Salmon but,to Date, we have a Whopping 62 fish in for the Year!!!There have been NO SALMON thus far!!The bills are still coming in and it is unconscionable to think for even one moment that we don't need every one of those disaster relief dollars!!DONALD JACOBS F/V ANA MARIA !

camj wrote on Feb 12, 2007 7:50 PM:

what a shame that a good peice of land is to be used for homes I hope every high tide floods them out

Bob wrote on Jan 26, 2007 5:10 PM:

"It is located here because this is where the proponents chose to locate it" -Why didn't I think of that? Enlightening info! Thank you.

Mr E wrote on Nov 29, 2006 3:00 PM:

What a shock, someone from out of state trying to tell us what to do in our own backyard.


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