Brix, Myrtle Alvina

Brix, Myrtle Alvina

Female 1895 - 1979  (84 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Brix, Myrtle AlvinaBrix, Myrtle Alvina was born on 1 Oct 1895 in Necanicum, Clatsop, Oregon, USA (daughter of Brix, Albert and Rosburg, Emile Alvina); died on 1 Nov 1979 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1940, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; 5511 SE Hawthorne

    Notes:

    Myrtle was a 1915 graduate of Lasell Junior College in Auburndale, Mass. She was a lifetime member of the alumni association. The following is from the alumni association publications. It deals with the aftermath of her husband Henry.

    Myrtle Brix Spangler feels now that her home is too large, she should move into smaller quarters but the view of four snow-capped mountains, the lovely fir trees and gorgeous sunrises and sunsets that she has from her home, make the very thought of moving, heartbreaking. "Billy" continues to be active with the Board of International Social Service.

    We have a new address for Myrtle Brix

    Spangler (Mrs. Harrison Spangler): 1000 S.W. Vista Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97205. Myrtle found her large home too lonesome after her husband's death and, also, too much of a temptation for burglars, for it was entered twice, once when Myrtle met the prowler "head-on". A most nerve-wracking experience! Now she lives in a pent-house apartment overlooking the city with a gorgeous view of Mt. Hood. Myrtle is another classmate who loves to travel. Last year, with a friend, she travelled through Portugal, northern Spain and then spent a month in Morocco. Went over the Atlas Mountains into the desert far enough to see the Blue Men of the desert.

    Barnes v. Eastern & Western Lbr. Co.

    Annotate this Case
    205 Or. 553 (1955)

    287 P.2d 929

    BARNES ET AL v. EASTERN AND WESTERN LUMBER COMPANY

    Supreme Court of Oregon.

    Argued December 15, 1954.

    Affirmed September 21, 1955.

    Petition for rehearing denied November 16, 1955.

    *557 Wilber Henderson argued the cause for appellants Eastern and Western Lumber Company, et al. With him on the briefs were Carl E. Davidson and Charles P. Duffy, all of Portland.

    Robert L. Sabin argued the cause for appellant United States National Bank of Portland, as Executor and Trustee under the Will of Frank H. Ransom, Deceased. With him on the briefs were Sabin & Malarkey and Carmie R. Dafoe, Jr., all of Portland.

    Robert F. Maguire argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief were Maguire, Shields, Morrison & Bailey, Latourette & Latourette, Henry A. Buehner and Harrison E. Spangler, all of Portland.

    AFFIRMED, LESS CREDIT APPLICATION.

    ROSSMAN, J.

    Four members of this court, prompted by a belief that a judge should not only be fair but should also be free from all relationship to the case and its parties *558 that might afford ground for distrusting his impartiality, announced after this appeal was filed that they deemed themselves disqualified and would not participate in the disposition of the appeal. The circumstances which induced their action were well-known to all of the parties. After those four justices had made their announcement, all parties joined in a petition requesting all seven justices to hear the case. The petition evinced confidence in the impartiality of all members of this court. Thereupon the case was heard in banc. We make this explanation so that no one will infer that any member of this court, without express approval, participated in the disposition of an appeal in which any party might have cause to deem him disqualified.

    This is an appeal by 18 of the 29 defendants from a decree in favor of the plaintiffs, 12 in number. The subject matter of the suit was 2500 shares of the capital stock of Eastern and Western Lumber Company, a corporation, which was dissolved November 6, 1946, before this suit was instituted, but which, nevertheless, was named as one of the 29 defendants. The plaintiffs were the owners of the aforementioned 2500 shares on February 8, 1944, and on that day sold them to Charles B. Duffy, K.H. Koehler, Frank H. Ransom and L.A. Morrison. Those four persons were the principal executive officers of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company. The plaintiffs were unaware of the fact that those individuals were the buyers, and allege that they would not have sold their stock had they known that the principal officers of the corporation were the buyers. Morrison died April 25, 1945, and Ransom on June 10, 1946. December 3, 1948, this suit was instituted. Its purpose, among others, was to effect a recission of the sale of the stock. One Lee *559 Burton Morrison, executor of the estate of L.A. Morrison, deceased, and the United States National Bank of Portland, trustee under Morrison's will, were made party defendants and both are now appellants. The same banking institution, as executor and trustee under the will of Frank H. Ransom, deceased, is again a defendant-appellant in the capacities last mentioned. Charles B. Duffy and K.H. Koehler were other defendants.

    We take the following from the challenged decree:

    "Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed as Follows: "1. That the sale and transfer by plaintiffs on February 8, 1944, of their 2500 shares of capital stock of Eastern and Western Lumber Company to Charles B. Duffy, K.H. Koehler, Frank H. Ransom, and L.A. Morrison, be and is rescinded, cancelled, annulled and held for naught as of February 8, 1944; "2. That Eastern and Western Lumber Company having been dissolved and liquidated and its assets distributed to its stockholders appearing of record and it being impossible for the defendants Charles B. Duffy, K.H. Koehler, The United States National Bank as executor of the Estate of Frank H. Ransom, deceased, and Lee Burton Morrison as executor of the estate of L.A. Morrison, deceased, to return to plaintiffs their said 2500 shares of capital stock of Eastern and Western Lumber Company the plaintiffs are entitled to and are hereby given joint and several judgment against Charles B. Duffy, K.H. Koehler, The United States National Bank of Portland as executor of the estate of Frank H. Ransom, deceased, and Lee Burton Morrison as executor of the estate of L.A. Morrison, deceased, and in the following amounts, โ€" "(a) $782,495.00, together with interest thereon at the rate of 6% per annum from October 23, 1946, which said interest up to the date of the entry of this decree is $263,178.95."
    *560 At that point the decree added 14 supplementary awards. Seven of the latter were each in the amount of $3,750 and represented dividends upon the aforementioned 2500 shares of corporate stock which were paid to the four defendants, Duffy, Ransom, Koehler and Morrison, subsequent to February 8, 1944. The remaining part of the 14 supplementary awards consisted of interest upon the seven sums of $3,750, calculated from the time payment was made to the day of the decree's entry.

    Apart from Duffy, Koehler, and the representatives of the estates of Ransom and Morrison, all of the other defendants are beneficiaries under the wills of the two decedents last mentioned or under the will of one W.B. Ayer, whom we will later identify. Since Duffy, Ransom, Koehler and Morrison were, according to the decree, the purchasers of the aforementioned block of stock and are the individuals whom the plaintiffs allege employed deceit, we will hereafter, for purposes of convenience, refer to them as the defendants and appellants, even though Ransom and Morrison died before this suit was instituted. After this appeal was argued, the plaintiffs-respondents, in consideration of $280,000 paid to them, stipulated "not to further prosecute said suit or press their said claim against" the defendant-appellant United States National Bank, as executor and trustee of Ransom's estate, nor against any of the other "Ransom defendants" (beneficiaries of Ransom's estate). The motion of the plaintiffs-respondents which presented the stipulation to this court reserved to the plaintiffs the right to continue the suit against all of the other defendants-appellants, subject to a credit of $280,000. Based upon the motion and stipulation, this court entered an order which gave effect to the stipulation. Hence, we are not called upon to adjudicate the *561 liability or nonliability of Ransom's estate or of any of the "Ransom defendants." We will, however, be required frequently to mention Ransom, and when we use the word "defendants" we will include him in the term.

    The challenged decree was entered after a trial, in the course of which evidence was received which, as transcribed, covers approximately 4,000 pages. The testimony is supplemented by exhibits, more than 300 in number, which consist in large part of correspondence, bank records, bookkeeping entries and corporate minutes. The entire record has been examined with care. Our review of it will be lengthy, but the facts in this case are of primary importance.

    The trial judge made no findings of fact. His decree, however, contains this recital:

    "The court having heretofore found for the plaintiffs and against the defendants that the allegations of plaintiffs' second amended complaint as amended, and the allegations of their reply to the answers and the further and separate answers and defenses of the defendants * * * are true * * * and that the allegations set forth in the answers and further and separate answers and defenses of defendants last above named are not sustained by the evidence and are not true * * *."
    It will be observed that the decree states that the allegations of the second amended complaint and those of the reply "are true" and that those of the answer were not sustained by the evidence. The four defendants, according to charges made by the plaintiffs' pleadings, deceived the plaintiffs and in that manner induced them to sell their stock. The complaint gives the following specifications of the general charge of fraud: the defendants (1) concealed from the plaintiffs *562 some of the lumber company's assets; (2) misstated and depreciated to the plaintiffs the value of a parcel of land in Portland upon which the lumber company's plant stood; (3) misrepresented and belittled to the plaintiffs the value of a large tract of pine timberland in Klickitat county, Washington, which the company purchased in 1920 as an investment; (4) falsified to the plaintiffs the probable value, upon liquidation, of the corporation's assets; (5) for the wrongful purpose of inducing them to anticipate corporate losses, told the plaintiffs that they, as the managing officers of the company, intended to cut the Klickitat county timber, bring the logs to Portland and mill them in the corporation's Portland plant; and (6) wrongfully concealed from the plaintiffs the fact that the defendants were the purchasers and induced them to infer that the purchaser was an individual who lived in St. Paul, Minnesota.

    The answer of the defendants traversed all of the charges of fraud. It denied that the defendants purchased the 2500 shares from the plaintiffs and averred that the latter, with full knowledge of the facts, sold their stock to an investment firm entitled Hess and Butchart. It alleged that the defendants later purchased the stock from that firm. The answer tendered defenses of estoppel, laches and the bar of the statute of limitations.

    The lumber company, which was incorporated in August, 1902, constructed a sawmill in Portland upon a site, about 22 acres in extent, which lay on the west bank of the Willamette river. Prior to 1930 the company earned large dividends for its stockholders. In the years 1930 to 1936, both inclusive, and in 1938 it operated at a loss. The year 1937 was profitable; so, also, was 1939 and from then on to 1946, when it was *563 dissolved. The dividends in recent years were smaller than those which it earned prior to 1930. The evidence suggests that the reduction in the amount of profits was due to war controls, the high cost of labor and the fact that, since the company had cut virtually all of its timber, it was compelled to resort in part to the log market for its supply, where it faced the higher sums which the plywood producers bid for logs.

    One of the incorporators of the company was the aforementioned W.B. Ayer, who, from 1902 to 1930, was president of the company and the dominating influence in its affairs. He died in 1935. Frank H. Ransom, Charles B. Duffy and K.H. Koehler joined the company's staff as employees about the time the company was organized or shortly thereafter. Upon the death of Mr. Ayer, Mr. Ransom succeeded him as president. After the other three defendants had joined the company's staff they, too, advanced to higher positions. Eventually Mr. Morrison became vice-president, Mr. Duffy, secretary-treasurer, and Mr. Koehler, vice-president and manager. All four were also members of the corporation's board of directors which consisted of seven members. The four men held the offices named when the plaintiffs sold their 2500 shares of stock.

    The items of property owned by the lumber company which are material to this suit are the following: (1) the millsite in Portland, about 22 acres in extent; (2) the Klickitat county timberland; and (3) miscellaneous items aggregating in value $100,471, termed by the plaintiffs "concealed" assets. The Klickitat county timberland was not one of the tracts of timber which for many years had supplied the mill with its logs. Items (1) and (2) were the most valuable that the corporation possessed.

    *564 According to the complaint, the defendants fraudulently told the plaintiffs that the millsite was worth no more than $273,000 when, in truth, according to the plaintiffs, its value was $785,000. Likewise, the defendants told the plaintiffs, so the complaint charges, that the Klickitat timber was worth no more than $790,000 when they knew, so the pleading says, that its value was more than $2,000,000. The miscellaneous items which the plaintiffs term "concealed" assets were four in number. We infer that the plaintiffs termed them concealed largely because they did not appear in the current account books of the company. One of the "concealed" assets was identified in the company's records as Butte Creek Timber and Lands; it yielded upon liquidation $28,503.58; a second, identified as Eufaula Lands, produced $21,813.25; a third, known as Wahkiakum Land, brought $385.40; a fourth, termed Molalla Inventory, consisted of logging equipment; its sale brought $49,770.82. The evidence indicates that in 1942 or 1943 Ransom told Mrs. Buehner that liquidation should yield for the shareholders about $218 per share. Liquidation was not undertaken at that time, but when it was effected, about three years later, it produced more than $400 per share.

    The identity of only one of the plaintiffs, Myrtle Buehner Spangler, is material in the disposition of this cause. All of the representations which the complaint deems fraudulent were make to her; she was the representative of the others. Mrs. Spangler is the daughter of the late Albert Brix, who in his active years was engaged in business as the Brix Logging Company and as the Knappton Lumber Company. In 1915, when she was in her teens, she was married to Henry Buehner, whose father, Philip Buehner, together *565 with W.B. Ayer, organized the Eastern and Western Lumber Company. Mr. Philip Buehner became the owner of one fourth of the company's capital stock, 2500 shares. He was elected a director of the company and still served in that capacity at the time of his death. Upon their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buehner took up their residence in Coos Bay where they became the parents of three children. In the city just mentioned Henry Buehner operated the Buehner Lumber Company. In 1923 the plant was sold and thereupon the family returned to Portland. Following the sale of the Buehner Lumber Company, the Buehner Investment Company, which is one of the plaintiffs in this suit, was organized. It was engaged in the business of investing and managing the capital funds of the Buehner family. Philip Buehner was its president and Henry Buehner its vice-president. Henry Buehner died May 1, 1937, and Philip Buehner in 1940. After the death of Henry Buehner, his widow became vice-president of the Buehner Investment Company and active in its management. Upon the death of her father-in-law, she (plaintiff Myrtle Buehner Spangler) was made president. At about the same time she succeeded him upon the board of directors of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company. Evidently the transactions of the Buehner Investment Company were sizeable. It maintained an office in a downtown office building in Portland, had a full-time secretary and subscribed to financial publications such as the Wall Street Journal. Some of its assets consisted of investments in lumber and logging enterprises. Its letterhead carried these words under the corporate name: "Timber โ€" Properties โ€" Investments". Letters written by Mrs. Spangler are a part of the record. They evince a good grasp of business terms and the ability to analyze as well as *566 give lucid explanation of entries in such financial papers as trial balances.

    Several years after the death of Henry Buehner in January, 1945, his widow, the plaintiff of whom we spoke in the preceding paragraph, married Harrison Spangler, a member of the Iowa bar. Mr. Spangler appeared in the trial court as one of the plaintiffs' attorneys and is one of their counsel upon appeal.

    As we have indicated, the subject matter of this suit is 2500 shares of stock of the lumber company. Mrs. Spangler was not the owner of all of those shares. The Buehner Investment Company and six individuals who are members of the Buehner family share with her in the ownership of the block. The 2500 shares were represented by 14 certificates held by eight owners. All of the owners, with the exception, of course, of Mrs. Spangler, annually gave their proxies to her and in the sale of the stock were represented by her as agent. From January, 1941, when she was elected to the board of directors of Eastern and Western Lumber Company, to February 8, 1944, when she sold the 2500 shares, she continued to serve as a member of that board and attended all of its meetings. She also attended all of the meetings of the stockholders which were held at the times relevant to the issues before us. The block of 2500 shares became known as the Buehner stock. In referring to it, we will employ that designation.

    We have mentioned an investment firm entitled Hess and Butchart. The plaintiffs claim that the firm was the defendants' agent when they purchased the Buehner stock. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs sold their stock outright to the firm and that they (defendants) later bought it from the firm. A member of the firm by the name of H.L. Phillips was *567 the individual who negotiated with Mrs. Spangler and who consummated the transaction. The evidence indicates that as early as January 30, 1942, Mrs. Spangler gave consideration to suggestions which contemplated a sale of the Buehner stock, and that upon occasion a representative of Hess and Butchart spoke to her. The plaintiffs lived in various places and, through correspondence, had discussed the value of their stock. The conception of value of most of them, with the possible exception of Mrs. Spangler, centered upon $100 per share as the amount which the stock was worth. Mrs. Spangler testified that she was undecided about the stock's value. In December, 1943, Mr. Duffy received information from a friend that Mrs. Spangler had indicated to Mr. Butchart an intention to sell the Buehner stock. The defendants, Duffy, Ransom, Koehler and Morrison, had been of the opinion for sometime that they should acquire the Buehner stock if it was available at an attractive price. Ransom, Koehler and Morrison authorized Duffy to negotiate for the stock at a price of not more than $100 per share. After receiving information that Mrs. Spangler might sell the stock, Duffy told Butchart that he would buy it, and on February 1, 1944, handed Butchart a letter which stated:

    "This letter will act as a firm commitment on my part for you to purchase for my account 2500 shares of Eastern and Western Lumber Company stock, par value price at $100 per share."
    The aforementioned H.L. Phillips, a member of Hess and Butchart, presumably told Mrs. Spangler that he had a buyer who would purchase the Buehner stock for $250,000. He falsely stated that the buyer lived in St. Paul, Minnesota. February 1, 1944, Phillips *568 handed to Mrs. Spangler a paper which appeared to be a telegram and which read:

    "Received from St. Paul, Minnesota, February 1, 1944 H.L. Phillips, 702 American Bank Bldg. Portland We can confirm for immediate acceptance purchase from you of twenty-five hundred shares Eastern and Western Lumber Company stock at one hundred dollars per share. Please call confirmation nine thirty my time tonight. Rex."
    Phillips, as a witness, conceded that the telegram was spurious, that he wrote it in his own office and that "Rex" was a fabrication.

    When the bogus telegram was shown to Mrs. Spangler she was unaware of its illegitimacy and assumed that it was genuine. She promptly communicated with her co-owners of the stock and the sale was consummated February 8, 1944. It is agreed that the four defendants, and not the nonexistent Rex, were the individuals whom Phillips had in mind as buyers and that after the 14 certificates which Mrs. Spangler delivered to the escrow agent had been canceled, new certificates to the four defendants were issued in these denominations: Duffy, 949 shares; Koehler, 739 shares; Morrison, 737 shares; and Ransom, 75 shares. Mrs. Spangler swore that she would not have sold the stock had she known that officers of the company, intimately familiar with its affairs and prospects, were the buyers.

    July 12, 1945, the Eastern and Western Lumber Company and the Commission of Public Docks of the city of Portland effected an agreement whereby a part *569 of the site occupied by the lumber company's mill was sold to the dock commission. February 11, 1946, the remaining part of the site was sold to the same public body. The first parcel brought $345,790 and the second, $440,000. The total was $785,790. April 9, 1945, the lumber company and the Longview Fibre Company executed an option agreement whereby the latter company was granted the right to purchase the Klickitat county timberland for the sum of $2,000,000. The option was later exercised. Through liquidation of the assets, the four defendants realized a liquidating dividend of more than $400 per share.

    The foregoing will serve as a prelude to and facilitate an understanding of the contentions which the parties make. After we have stated the assignment of error and have mentioned the appellants' contentions, we will return to the evidence.

    The defendants-appellants present a single assignment of error which submits that the trial judge erred in holding for naught the sale of the 2500 shares of corporate stock. It also submits that he erred in awarding a money judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, Duffy, Koehler and the aforementioned representatives of the estates of Morrison and Ransom "jointly and severally in the amount of $782,495, together with interest thereon from October 23, 1946 * * * and for seven several amounts of $3,750.00 each with interest thereon * * * and requiring the several appellants to respond as to the money judgments * * *."

    We will now consider the contention that the plaintiffs failed to prove their charges of fraud.

    In our analysis of the charges of fraud, we deem it our duty to bear in mind the fact that Mrs. Spangler was a member of the company's board of directors *570 during the period in which the defendants [if the plaintiffs' charges are warranted] defrauded the plaintiffs. She was elected to the board in January, 1941, and remained a member until the hour when she disposed of her stock. She attended eight meetings of the board. Therefore, the relationship of the purported tort-feasors to the alleged victim was not that of directors to stockholder, but that of directors to director. The plaintiffs contend that the defendants desired to acquire the Buehner stock at a small fraction of its value and that, in order to consummate their evil purposes, resorted to the fraudulent practices which the complaint specifies. If their charges are true, four directors deceived and defrauded a fellow member of the board. Although the four defendants did not own a majority of the corporation's stock, they and other owners who were in accord with their views constituted a majority of the shareowners. Mrs. Spangler and another director by the name of M.B. Henderson, whose opinions concerning the company and its future were similar to hers, were generally in the minority at board meetings.

    In their briefs the plaintiffs contend that a fiduciary relation exists between (a) a director and a shareholder, and (b) a director and a fellow director in sales of stock and in other transactions that occur between them. They cite in support of their contention the following Oregon decisions and in addition some chosen from other jurisdictions: Davis v. Hofer, 38 Or 150, 63 P 56; Wills v. Nehalem Coal Co., 52 Or 70, 96 P 528; Muellhaupt v. Strowbridge Estate Co., 136 Or 106, 298 P 189; and Enyart v. Merrick, 148 Or 321, 34 P2d 679. We have studied each of those opinions with care, but do not believe that they support the contentions of the plaintiffs. Our view of the *571 evidence renders unnecessary a determination of the contention submitted by the plaintiffs that a director is a fiduciary of a fellow director when one of them purchases from the other shares of stock issued by their corporation. Hence, we deem it unnecessary to set forth herein an analysis of the above cited decisions.

    During the times which are material in this suit ง 77-218, OCLA (repealed by Oregon Laws 1953, ch 549, ง 136), provided as follows:

    "* * * From the first meeting of the directors, the powers vested in the corporation are exercised by them, or by their officers or agents under their direction, except as otherwise specifically provided in this chapter."
    The by-laws of the corporation contained this provision:

    "The general management of the business of the company shall be in the hands of the Board of Directors who shall possess, enjoy and exercise all powers whatsoever in full for the transaction of business and in the management of the affairs of the concerns of the corporation."
    In Corbett v. Woodward, 5 Sawy 403, 6 Fed Cas 3223, Judge Deady, a pioneer member of the Oregon judiciary, declared:

    "* * * By becoming a director, which includes the taking of an oath to `faithfully and honestly discharge' the duties of the office, he engages to take good care of the interests of the stockholders and creditors intrusted to his charge, and this necessarily implies that he will use due diligence to keep himself properly informed concerning the same."
    In Gantenbein v. Bowles, 103 Or 277, 203 P 614, this court said:

    "* * * The directors are presumed to know, * * * the financial condition of the Company."
    *572 Section 77-236, OCLA, which was in effect during the times material in this suit, but which was repealed by Oregon Laws 1953, ch 549, ง 138, in prescribing the manner in which a corporation shall maintain its records, said that the "books of the corporation necessary for carrying on its business shall be subject to the inspection, at all reasonable hours, by any person interested therein and applying therefor."

    1. Accordingly, it was the duty of Mrs. Spangler, as a director, to keep herself informed concerning the assets and activities of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company. Sections 77-218 and 77-236, OCLA, empowered her to gain information which she needed for the competent discharge of her duties. Her election to the board of directors did not constitute merely the bestowal of an honor upon her; her election and acceptance of the office imposed upon her important duties and responsibilities. The duties and responsibilities which she assumed when she became a director were not less than those of the other members of the board.

    2. We have seen that before becoming a member of the board of directors she served as vice-president of the Buehner Investment Company and that while so doing she must have become acquainted with balance sheets and the manner in which investors determine the value of securities. While serving as a member of the board of directors of the lumber company she took an active interest in its transactions. In 1942 she sought to persuade the board to adopt a program of liquidation. Prior to that she attempted to enlist enough stockholders to enable her to command a majority. Due to the circumstances of which we have taken note, we believe that, although Mrs. Spangler was a mother and a housewife, we must deem that in the period which *573 is material to this case she possessed sufficient knowledge of business and bookkeeping practices to enable her to grasp the significance of the various papers and records which came to her attention when she contemplated and consummated the sale of the Buehner stock. In addition, she possessed a practical acquaintanceship with investment practices and the problems that confront the lumberman. The knowledge which she had acquired must be imputed to her co-owners of the Buehner stock.

    We turn directly to the defendants' contentions that the plaintiffs did not prove that the defendants were guilty of misrepresentation in the purchase of the Buehner stock.

    3, 4. A preceding paragraph sets forth the specifications of the plaintiffs' general charge of fraud. We read with painstaking care the lengthy transcript of testimony and bestowed similar attention upon the numerous exhibits. Manifestly, the plaintiffs had the burden of proof upon all of their charges. Our analysis of the record has not satisfied a majority of this court that the first five specifications of the charge of fraud were sustained. The majority believe that in regard to those specifications the plaintiffs did not meet the exacting demands which the law imposes upon those who charge others with deception. This opinion would be prolonged if we included in it our analysis of the evidence which the parties presented upon those five phases of the charge of fraud. We shall refrain from so doing and will confine ourselves to the statement that, in the opinion of the majority, the first five specifications are without merit.

    The sixth specification of the general charge of fraud submits that the defendants knew that the plaintiffs would not sell the Buehner stock to insiders, such *574 as the defendants, and therefore deceived them into a belief that the purchaser was someone who lived in St. Paul, Minnesota. It will be recalled that, seven days before the challenged transaction was effected, H.L. Phillips, a stockbroker whom we have mentioned, showed Mrs. Spangler a paper which appeared to be a telegram addressed to himself from a person in St. Paul offering $100 per share for the 2500 shares of Buehner stock. The defendants freely concede that the paper was not a telegram and that Phillips wrote it in his office in Portland. They make no effort to excuse his iniquitous act. Phillips, as we shall later show, made other false representations to Mrs. Spangler concerning the identity of the buyer.

    Before considering the merits of this phase of the charge of fraud it is necessary to determine whether Phillips was, as the plaintiffs claim, the agent of the defendants.

    5, 6. Generally, an agent is one who has authority to act for another in contractual dealings with third persons: Mechem on Agency, ง 26. It is clear from the evidence that Phillips did not represent Mrs. Spangler, for she dealt with him at arm's length throughout the negotiations and was represented by her own attorney when the sale was closed. The record admits of only two possibilities as to the relationship between the defendants and Phillips: (a) that of buyers and seller, or (b) that of principals and agent. In a three-party transaction involving only a single purchase, the cases, as we will illustrate, indicate that whether the relation between customer and broker is one or the other of the two just mentioned, turns on whether the customer and the broker bargain at arm's length with each other concerning price and the other terms which the customer receives when he completes his purchase, or *575 whether the understanding between them is that the broker shall act for the customer in the transaction.

    In Atlas Land Co. v. Hendricks, 298 F 589, the parties-defendant were a land company and a real estate agent. In two contemporaneous transactions the land company had granted a tract of land to the real estate agent and he in turn had conveyed to the plaintiff. Upon averments that the real estate agent was the representative of the land company and had made false representations concerning the land, the plaintiff brought suit to rescind the land contract and a mortgage which was connected with his purchase. He also sought the recovery of part of the purchase price which the real estate agent had paid to the land company. The court's discussion of the facts indicates that the land company and the real estate agent dealt at arm's length with each other. The real estate agent had entered into negotiations with the land company concerning the purchase of the land sold to the plaintiff before he met the latter. After the agent had agreed to sell the property to the plaintiff at a profit of $3,600 for himself, he then closed his previous negotiation with the land company so that the terms of his obligations to it would correspond with those of the plaintiff's obligations to him. The court held that the real estate agent was not the agent of the land company and the judgment in favor of the plaintiff against it was reversed.

    In Foley v. Nimocks, 175 Ia 464, 157 NW 178, the plaintiff had purchased four shares of stock in a corporation. Two of them were purchased at the request of the defendant, who agreed to take them from the plaintiff at a prescribed time. The defendant failed to perform and the plaintiff was required to pay an assessment on the two shares as a result of the corporation's *576 bankruptcy. An action was brought to recover the price paid for the two shares and the amount of the assessment. The defendant contended that the relation between himself and the plaintiff was that of buyer and seller and that his performance was excused because the plaintiff failed to tender the stock. However, it was held that the relation between the parties was that of principal and agent. The court found that the parties had effected an understanding whereby the plaintiff was to handle the stock as agent until the defendant took it. The court's treatment of the facts reveals that the parties did not deal at arm's length, but rather that the plaintiff, who, prior to being approached by the defendant, had no interest in acquiring the stock, merely accommodated the defendant who lacked money for the purchase.

    7. We shall now consider the evidence which discloses the relation that existed between the defendants and Phillips in order to determine whether they bargained at arm's length as to price and other terms or whether the defendants controlled the transaction and Phillips merely carried out their instructions. Defendant Duffy testified that his first contact with Butchart and Phillips of the firm of Hess and Butchart concerning the Buehner stock occurred in the latter part of 1943 or the beginning of 1944, although there is evidence that Duffy called upon the brokerage firm earlier. The following is Duffy's version of the circumstances which led to his first meeting with Butchart and Phillips:

    "Q And were you not asked the following question: `Q 1943?' And did you not make the following answer: `A '43. And when I conferred with my associates I then made an effort to buy the stock. Mr. *577 Dick told me that we were in a precarious position, that if Mrs. Buehner sold this stock, and then when the Art Association got their stock from the trust account he was satisfied that that stock would be immediately sold as it wasn't the class of stock that the Art Association would carry, so he said, "You boys should get together and buy that stock of Mrs. Buehner," he says, "even if you have to pay as high as par for it," which I thought was too much, but Mr. Dick told me that if we could buy the stock he would see that it was financed for me, and I told my associates about it. Mr. Dick had told me that Mr. Butchart was the party that was offering it, and I went to see Mr. Butchart and from that time on he handled the situation.' Did you not so testify? "A I think I did."
    Duffy testified as follows concerning the first time he spoke to Butchart about the purchase of the Buehner stock and the understanding which he then effected:

    "Q Well, just when was it that you first went and talked to Mr. Butchart or to any person in his organization with regard to having him try to acquire this stock for you? "A It was late in 1943 or possibly early January of 1944. * * * "Q Did you tell Mr. Butchart or anyone in his organization what you were willing to pay for the stock when you first went to see him? "A Yes, sir, I did. "Q What did you tell him? "A * * * I told him I thought he ought to acquire the stock for around $70 or $75, and he said he didn't think he could get it for that. * * * "Q All right. And when he said he didn't think he could get it for that price, $70 or $75, you told *578 him to go out and find out what he could buy it for, didn't you? "A He told me it had been offered at par, and I told him to try to buy it at $70 or $75. "Q Didn't he tell you he felt sure he couldn't get it for $70 or $75, and didn't you then tell him to go out and see what was the best price he could get it for? "A I told him to make inquiry about it, yes. "Q And did you tell him that you would pay up to par if you had to? "A I did then, or at some later time. "Q But the idea was to have him go out and get it at the best price below par if possible, is that it? "A That's right."
    Later, Duffy, in a letter dated February 1, 1944, addressed to Hess and Butchart, probably to confirm a previous understanding with them, authorized the firm to purchase for him the Buehner stock at a price of $100 per share. The letter reads:

    "This letter will act as a firm commitment on my part for you to purchase for my account 2500 shares of Eastern and Western Lumber Company stock, par value at $100.00 per share. "Payment for the above securities will be made immediately upon notification from you that the transaction has been consummated."
    Butchart testified that the purchase of the Buehner stock was consummated after he received the above letter:

    "Q I think we are talking at cross purposes there, Mr. Butchart. I did not make myself clear. You did not make a firm offer to Mrs. Buehner of the Buehner Investment Company until you had a firm offer from somebody else to buy the stock, did you? * * * And wasn't Mr. Duffy's offer the firm offer you had? "A Well, it would seem so."
    *579 The purchase of the Buehner stock was completed February 8, 1944. The foregoing testimony, in our opinion, establishes that Butchart and Phillips were the agents of Duffy. The parties did not deal at arm's length with each other. Rather, Duffy instructed Butchart to try to get the stock at about $70 to $75 per share, or at the most favorable price below par if it was possible to acquire the stock below par. Subsequently Duffy gave Hess and Butchart written authority to buy the stock. Therefore, Phillips, who was associated with Hess and Butchart and who negotiated the purchase of the Buehner stock, was acting for Duffy and his principals. He was their agent.

    Since we have concluded that Phillips and his firm of Hess and Butchart were the agents of the defendants, we now return to the specification of the general charge of fraud which centers in the spurious telegram which Phillips handed to Mrs. Spangler a few days before the plaintiffs sold their stock. This phase of the charge of fraud is based upon a contention that the defendants knew that Mrs. Spangler would not sell the stock to them and that Phillips, in order to circumvent her objection, resorted to the phony telegram.

    The defendants, in challenging this specification of the charge of fraud, cite decisions which declare that, generally, the buyer owes no duty to inform the seller of the identity of the person on whose behalf the purchase is being made. Good illustrations of the type of transactions to which the rule enunciated in those decisions is applicable are afforded by sales of goods over the counter for cash; in most instances of that kind the identity of the contracting parties is immaterial. 3 Corbin on Contracts, ง 603. Cases of that general type are inapposite to the situation before us. If there *580 is no duty to divulge the identity of the buyer, or if there is no misrepresentation concerning his identity, the question of materiality is not presented. Haverland v. Lane, 89 Wash 557, 154 P 1118, cited by the defendants, was an action to recover damages, resulting, according to the plaintiffs, from the defendant's alleged fraud. The court found as a fact that the plaintiffs were not interested in the identity of the ultimate purchaser and, therefore, it was unnecessary for the court to have discussed whether or not concealment of his identity warranted recovery in an action for deceit. In that case, the defendant was an officer, and the plaintiffs were shareholders, of the corporation whose stock was the subject matter of the sale. The defendant did not disclose to the plaintiffs the fact that he was purchasing the stock in order to resell it at a higher price to a subsidiary of the Bell Telephone Company. The court, in reaching its decision, said:

    "We shall spend no time in discussing the contention that the concealment of the fact that the stock was bought for the interest if not for the account of the Bell Company was a deceit warranting a recovery. One of the plaintiffs admits that it made no difference to him who the actual buyer was, and the others so testify that the only fair inference to be drawn from the testimony is that they too had no interest in the purchaser. Their only concern was to get a satisfactory price."
    In Cowan v. Fairbrother, 118 NC 406, 24 SE 212, an action to enjoin the vendor of a newspaper business from violating a covenant not to compete, it was said that the concealment or failure to tell the vendor of the identity of the purchaser of the business was not fraudulent per se. However, it does not appear that any misrepresentation of identity was made.

    *581 Llewelyn v. Queen City Dairy, Inc., 187 Md 49, 48 A2d 322, cited by the defendants-respondents, held that a corporation has no cause of action against directors who fraudulently acquire stock from its shareholders. The decision stated that, aside from the question as to whether the duties of a trustee to make full disclosure are imposed upon directors who purchase stock from shareholders, the shareholders involved in the case had within their possession knowledge of the affairs of the corporation and that the identity of the ultimate purchaser was immaterial. The court apparently concluded that when directors deal openly with stockholders in purchasing their stock for resale, they are under no duty to disclose the ultimate purchaser. Misrepresentation of identity was not involved, much less the materiality of the identity of the ultimate purchaser in situations where he is a director.

    8. The principle under analysis is stated as follows by Restatement of the Law, Agency, ง 304:

    "A person with whom an agent contracts on account of an undisclosed principal may rescind the contract if he was induced to enter into it by a representation that the agent was not acting for a principal and if, as the agent or principal had notice, he would not have dealt with the principal."
    In the Comment following ง 304, it is stated:

    "* * * It may be material, however, because the other party does not wish to deal with the principal. Under such conditions, if the agent, having notice of such facts, represents that he is acting solely on his own account, the other party may rescind. If the agent knows that the other party would not enter into transactions with the principal, his failure to disclose the existence of the principal may be such misleading conduct that a court of *582 equity or a court of law acting with equity powers may grant rescission or other relief."
    The decisions which we will now mention illustrate the application of the rule which we quoted from the Restatement.

    In Stewart v. Joyce, 201 Mass 301, 87 NE 613, the plaintiff, a shareholder in the Gillette Safety Razor Company, sold his shares to the treasurer of the company who, in turn, transferred them to the other defendants. All of the others except one were directors of the corporation. The plaintiff had informed the treasurer that he would sell his stock to him but not to the other defendants. He was induced to sell his shares to the treasurer for less than their value by the false representation that the treasurer was making the purchase in order to retain his position with the company, and also upon false financial statements prepared by the treasurer. The court said:

    "It having been further found that at the time he was buying for the purpose of selling or transferring stock to them (the other defendants) this representation was not only false but was properly held to be material, and the defendant's first exception must be overruled."
    The plaintiff in that case was granted relief against the intermediate purchaser, the treasurer, but the suit was dismissed as to the other defendants since the plaintiff failed to establish either agency or conspiracy between them and the treasurer. The decision indicates that the treasurer, and not the other defendants, profited from the transaction.

    In White Tower Management Corporation v. Taglino, 302 Mass 453, 19 NE2d 700, specific performance of an agreement to convey land was denied to the purchaser because his identity was falsely represented *583 by his agent in the negotiations which preceded the agreement. The seller in that case had informed the agent that he would not sell to any person who was engaged in business and, more specifically, to anyone who operated a restaurant. The buyer was engaged in the latter business, but his agent told the seller that the purchasers were two persons who desired to obtain the land for residential use.

    Thompson v. Barry, 184 Mass 429, 68 NE 674, rescinded a deed because the purchaser was represented in the negotiations which led to its execution as a person who would use the property for residence purposes, whereas it really was a church corporation which intended to construct a church upon the land. The identity of the purchaser was deemed material because it was indicative of the use to be made of the granted land which in turn would probably affect adversely the value of adjacent land which the grantor retained.

    We shall review the decisions no further. We think that they justify the rule promulgated by the Restatement which is quoted in a preceding paragraph. Mechem, Outlines of Agency, 4th ed, pages 111 through 113, and note 44 Harv L Rev 1271, are in accord with the rule given by the Restatement and cite additional authorities which support it.

    9, 10. Parties who enter into transactions have a lawful right to determine for themselves those with whom they care to deal: Crowder v. Yovovich, 84 Or 41, 164 P 576. Through another's fraud they should not be deprived of that right. We think that the foregoing cases establish the proposition that the identity of the other party to the transaction is material if the transaction would not have been consummated had the seller known who the buyer was and the latter either knew, or had good reason to know, of the seller's predisposition *584 toward him. The facts in the cases that we reviewed differ slightly from those in the case at bar in that in those situations the seller informed the buyer through his agent that he would not sell to him, whereas, here, as we shall presently indicate, the defendants only had reason to know that the plaintiffs would not sell to them. But this dissimilarity would not yield a different result, for, in the latter situation, the buyer does not improve his position by falsely representing his identity and thus make it appear unnecessary for the seller to disclose his aversion for him. Since the buyer's conduct is more probably than not influential in preventing confirmation of his belief that the seller has antipathy toward him, it seems fair to regard the situation as though the buyer's unuttered belief was confirmed. A decision which illustrates this view is Gordon v. Street, 2 QB 641. There, the plaintiff, a moneylender, whose reputation for oppressive dealing was notorious, assumed a false name and thereby managed to lend money to the defendant at a large rate of interest. The defendant swore that he would not have borrowed from the plaintiff had he known who he really was. The report of the case does not indicate that the plaintiff had been informed of the defendant's attitude toward him, but shows that he knew that most people avoided him because of his reputation for oppressive dealing. The court deemed the misrepresentation material and a defense to an action on the note.

    No hardship is thrust upon a buyer, who has reason to know that the seller will not deal with him, to remain silent or, if he speaks, to state the truth concerning his identity.

    We now turn to the facts of this case. In a preceding paragraph we stated that Phillips, the stockbroker, *585 upon the eve of the challenged transaction handed to Mrs. Spangler a paper in the form of a telegram which appeared to have been sent to him from St. Paul, Minnesota, and which read:

    "We confirm for immediate acceptance purchase from you of twenty five hundred shares Eastern and Western Lumber Company at one hundred dollars per share. Please call confirmation nine thirty my time tonight. Rex."
    The defendants, as we have noticed, frankly concede that the "telegram" was a ruse. The record indicates that Phillips made other false representations that his client was from the East. Mrs. Spangler testified:

    "Q Now you started to say that he came into your office in the Public Service Building on the 31st of January, 1944, and you started to tell us what he had told you. "A Stating that he had a client for our Eastern โ€" interested in wanting our Eastern and Western stock, the full 2500 shares. * * * "Q Five points for commission. Did he say what part of the country this client lived in or did business? "A He had a letter, apparently not pertaining, but at the time gave me the idea, the impression that it was from a client in St. Paul, and intimated that it was a man dealing for Weyerhaeuser, the intimation. And this St. Paul firm was meeting โ€" they were meeting in St. Paul the next night. Therefore, there was need of great haste in the decision, * * *."
    Mrs. Spangler testified that she would not have sold the Buehner stock had she known that the purchasers were the defendants. Her testimony to that effect is credible, and we accept it as such. The purchasers, whose identity Phillips concealed, were the executive officers of the corporation. Each of the four was active *586 in the management of the business and intimately familiar with the corporation's affairs. Through their daily contact with its operations, the four undoubtedly came into a superior position to judge the prospects of the company, the value of its assets and the likelihood that the Buehner stock, if acquired at $100 per share, would prove to be a profitable investment.

    The Eastern and Western Lumber Company was a close corporation. Its stock was not listed upon any stock exchange and sales of its shares occurred infrequently. It was difficult for a shareholder, who wished to sell, to acquire information indicative of the stock's value. One or more of the defendants generally assisted a stockholder who desired to dispose of his holding and in so doing thereby gained knowledge of the amount paid for the stock.

    Had Mrs. Spangler known that the executive officers of the corporation were the ones who wished to purchase her stock, she might have attempted to discover the information about the company which had convinced them that, at a price of $100 per share, the stock constituted a good investment. It is probable that if she had been told that the executive officers were the buyers she would have concluded that since they believed that, at a price of $100 per share, the stock was a desirable purchase, she should keep hers.

    We also think that the defendants had reason to believe that Mrs. Spangler would not have sold them the Buehner stock had she known that they were the purchasers. If the defendants had no doubt that they could have obtained, in face-to-face bargaining, the stock for the price actually paid, their resort to an agent was unnecessary. Duffy's testimony concerning the manner in which Mrs. Spangler was approached *587 reveals at the least that there was some hostility between her and the defendants. The following appears in the record:

    "Q And why didn't you go to her? "A Well, I think after the meeting in 1942 that I certainly wouldn't approach her after that * * *. "Q Well, you knew she wanted to get out of the stock didn't you? "A No, I didn't, I knew she was trying to sell it late in 1943, I knew she was trying to sell it, yes .. . "Q Why didn't you go to see her then? "A I didn't want to. "Q I know you didn't want to, but why? "A I can't tell you why."
    11. As we have previously said, the defendants very likely had information concerning the company, its prospects and principal assets which other stockholders did not have. Whether they selected an agent to negotiate with Mrs. Spangler because they did not wish to arouse her suspicions concerning information of such a nature, or because there was hostility between them and her, or for some other reason, we are convinced that Mrs. Spangler would not knowingly have sold her stock to the defendants, and that the defendants sensed this. Therefore, we conclude that the misrepresentation of the defendants' identity was a misrepresentation of a material fact.

    12, 13. The evidence does not indicate that any of the defendants expressly authorized either Phillips or Hess and Butchart to employ deceit in inducing the plaintiffs to sell their stock, and it does not suggest that the defendants were aware, when the transaction was consummated, that Phillips had resorted to a fake telegram or to any other act of fraud in discharging *588 the commission with which they had entrusted him. However, a principal, who commits to an agent a duty, in the performance of which the agent will be required to make representations, is liable for misrepresentations made by him in the discharge of the duty which he employed in his efforts to serve his principal. The liability is incurred in much the same manner as the corresponding liability for the agent's negligence. Mechem on Agency, งง 1984 and 1987. See, also, 3 CJS, Agency, ง 236.

    14. Restatement of the Law, Agency, ง 259, gives us this rule:

    "A transaction into which one is induced to enter by reliance upon untrue and material representations as to the subject matter, made by an agent entrusted with its preliminary or final negotiations, is subject to rescission at the election of the person deceived."
    And ง 263 says:

    "Unless he has changed his position, a principal whose agent has fraudulently acquired property for him, holds it subject to the interests of the defrauded person."
    Sharkey v. The Burlingame Co., 131 Or 185, 282 P 546, and Bank of Gresham v. Walch, 76 Or 272, 147 P 534, illustrate the application of the principles of which we have just taken notice.

    Since we have concluded that fraud for which the defendants are responsible was employed in inducing the plaintiffs to sell their stock, it becomes necessary to determine the nature of the relief to which the plaintiffs are entitled. The decree of the circuit court imposed joint and several liability upon the defendants in an amount approximating the liquidation value of the plaintiffs' stock, less the consideration which the *589 defendants had paid to the plaintiffs. The defendants, in challenging the decree, maintain that each of them should only be severally liable for the amount of the stock which he received upon the distribution among the four of the block of 2500 shares.

    The complaint prayed for rescission of the sale of the stock, that the defendants be declared trustees of the plaintiffs' stock, that a trust be impressed upon some funds belonging to the corporation which still remained in Duffy's possession, and for an accounting. In their briefs, counsel have taken the position that whether the defendants are liable jointly and severally or only severally depends upon whether persons, who in concert wrongfully acquire and distribute property among themselves, are each jointly and severally liable as constructive trustees of the whole or only severally as constructive trustee of the part each acquired. It will be noticed that the issue debated by the parties does not quite meet the facts of this case, for the judgment actually rendered was a simple money judgment and no trust was impressed upon assets to which the defendants held title. Nevertheless, since constructive trust relief was sought by the plaintiffs, and since, as we shall show, that type of relief is based upon quasi-contractual principles, we think that the question presented is whether a joint and several money judgment can be rendered in accordance with such principles against joint wrongdoers who obtain property by fraud.

    It is necessary at this point to take note of some additional facts. The defendants divided the Buehner stock among themselves in these amounts: Duffy, 949 shares; Koehler, 739 shares; Morrison, 737 shares; Ransom, 75 shares. It seems that the uneven division of the shares was made so that each of the four defendants would have, after account had been taken of *590 the number of shares held by each on the day of division, approximately the same number of shares. The stock was paid for by the defendants through a loan in the amount of $250,000 which they procured from the United States National Bank. The loan was evidenced by a promissory note in the sum of $250,000 which each of the four signed and in which each rendered himself liable jointly and severally for the entire debt. Payment of the note was secured by a pledge of the 2500 shares. The four defendants agreed among themselves that each should discharge the portion of the loan which was represented by the number of shares which he obtained in the distribution.

    One reason which caused the defendants to purchase the Buehner stock was that its ownership would enable them to continue their control of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company. Due in part to his large stockholding Mr. Ayer, during his presidency of the Eastern and Western Lumber Company, had dominated the corporation. When Mr. Ransom succeeded Mr. Ayer, he and the other three defendants were the owners of less than a majority of the stock, but they commanded a majority vote through the fact that stock which Mr. Ayer had placed in trust with the United States National Bank was voted in accord with the shares which Ransom owned. The will of Mr. Ayer, which created the trust, instructed the bank, as trustee, to pursue that course. Shortly prior to February 8, 1944, Mr. P.S. Dick, president of the United States National Bank, called the attention of Mr. Duffy to the fact that before long the Ayer trust would terminate and that thereupon the shares which the bank held would be distributed to numerous individuals. He suggested to Duffy that the Buehner stock should be purchased by the defendants so as to *591 assure them continued control over the corporation. Possibly Mr. Dick's advice was unnecessary, for it appears that upon a previous occasion the defendants had sought to purchase the Buehner stock and had made inquiries at that time concerning a bank loan. However, shortly after Mr. Dick's counsel, the defendants purchased the stock. A desire to remain in command of the corporation was, therefore, a prime factor in persuading the defendants to purchase the Buehner stock.

    Myrtle married Spangler, Harrison Earl on 12 Jun 1945. Harrison was born on 10 Jun 1879 in Guthrie, Iowa, USA; died on 28 Jul 1965 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Myrtle married Buehner, Henry P in 1915 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA. Henry was born on 28 Oct 1889 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; died on 1 May 1937 in Delmar, Coos, Oregon, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Buehner, Phillip was born on 7 Oct 1916 in North Bend, Coos, Oregon, USA; died on 14 Mar 2005 in Washington, Oregon, USA; was buried in Mar 2005 in River View Cemetery, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.
    2. Buehner, Patricia was born in 1920 in North Bend, Coos, Oregon, USA; died in 1964 in USA; was buried in 1964 in River View Cemetery, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.
    3. Buehner, Henry Albert Jr was born on 3 Mar 1925 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; died on 24 Apr 1980 in Clackamas, Clackamas, Oregon, USA; was buried after 24 Apr 1989 in River View Cemetery, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Brix, AlbertBrix, Albert was born on 7 May 1866 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany (son of Brix, Peter Friedrich and Andreson, Mary Christina); died on 16 Feb 1921 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; was buried after 16 Feb 1921 in Wilhelm's Portland Memorial, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1900, Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA
    • Residence: 1910, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA

    Notes:

    December 9, 1937, the Grays River Builder newspaper had a story written by Harriet Alta Meserve, the editor. On the Brix family here is a copy of what it said.

    The story of the Brix family is largely the result of facts and incidents remembered and collected by Mrs. Margaretha Erp, the oldest survivor of the original Brix children, with the help of P.J. Brix and Anton H. Brix who are the only other two now living from the first generation.

    However, there are now, all told 36 living descendants, including children, grand children, great-grandchildren and one only great great grandchild, of the original Brix family of which Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Brix were the original parents.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix came to Grays River 56 years ago, in 1881. They brought with them in chronological order from the oldest down, seven children Albert, Margaretha, P. John, Christoph, Helene, Anton and Herman.

    Asmus, the oldest son, had come to Grays River two years earlier in company with Peter Sorensen and Anton Sorensen in 1879, when he was 15 years old. Anton Sorensen returning at that time from Denmark with his bride; also bringing Asmus with him from Germany to H.P. Andresen, who was Asmus uncle. Here Asmus lived until the rest of the family arrived in 1881.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix, with the other members of the family and also an old aunt and uncle of mother Brix, Mr. and Mrs. H.P. Henningsen, left their home in Schleswig-Holstein Germany, April 28, 1881. They were then 46 and 41, respectively, and were headed for mother Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen now the John Johnson place at Rosburg. Mr. H.P. Andresen had then already lived in America for 20 years, having come across the plains with a survey party, with which he at one time almost perished for the want of water. He arrived at Astoria in the 60's and settled on his homestead at the old home place in 1869.

    The Brix family left Hamburg in the spring of the years and came to London two days later. There they were transported across the city on an elevated railway a novelty at that time-to their, an English streamer. Not a word could be understood by the party They had hoped to take a german ship, but found that so many passengers were booked ahead that no passage could be obtained before fall.

    So after 3 weeks or 19 days to be exact, of seasickness and misery they landed in New York at Old Castle Garden. The next day they started west by emigrant train wherein sleepers consisted of wooden boards placed between the upturned seats like an extension table. each one supplied his own bedding, as none was furnished.

    The night of the second day on the train brought them to Pittsburgh. After the smaller children were put to bed, the conductor came through and called out something that no one understood, but when the train stopped and they saw passengers getting off, they knew it meant "change cars".

    In the scramble the afore mentioned "old aunty" left her bag of lump sugar on the window sill, and that was a serious matter for she needed it for her coffee. The next stop was at Chicago and father Brix ventured out in an effort to replace the lump sugar and procure some kerosene for aunty's little oil stove which she had brought with her to cook her afternoon coffee on. He met on the street what was known as as "emigrant Fleecer." A man accosted him in the German language and offered to show him a store where he could procure his requirements. They only went a short distance when he was either slugged or drugged. At any rate, when he regained consciousness, his money was all missing. There they were a large family of small children, on their way west on an emigrant train, without anything with which to buy food.

    Fortunately, old uncle still had a little with him, and the entire party had to subsist on his small savings. when they reached Council Bluffs, their tickets were challenged. They were told they must have a half fare for one of the others. Finally an attachment was placed on their baggage and they were allowed to go on to San Francisco. What a predicament! Without funds and tickets still to be purchased from San Francisco to Astoria.
    Fortunately, they found a hotel keeper in San Francisco who could speak their language, and he succeeded in getting their baggage released. They then boarded ship again for the railroad was then not built north from San Francisco.

    It was arranged that a young man, Herman Hansel, whose family lived on the old Schobie place, later the Bergman place and now the Cook place, was to meet them at Astoria and take them to the old Occidental hotel in case neither Asmus or the Andresens could be there.

    However, as they came down the gang plank from the streamer, State of California, Mrs. Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen, grabbed her large bag which she was carrying. Not expecting to see her brother there, Mrs. Brix did not recognize him, and resisted vigorously. But soon a happy greeting followed, after she had recognized her escort.

    Mr. and Mrs. Andresen had come over to Astoria in a skiff to meet them, but it was finally arranged to have the small streamer, Rosetta, take the whole party to Grays River. For some reason, however-whether on account of low tides or the captain's unfamiliarity with the Grays River channel-the stopped off at Knappton where they spent the night.

    The next day they entered lower Grays River and saw for the first time a number of bears climbing up trees along the river bank, and landed at the H.P. Andresen place at the mouth of the small creek near where the Rosburg store now stands. They all lived with the Andresens for about six weeks, when they moved down to the Grounds place, later known as the Amundson place.

    Asmus had purchased a small fraction of land and cleared a plot and planted a garden. This, of course was thankfully received and proved a big help, when the family moved onto the place, which was then a wilderness of large trees, vine maple and underbrush. Father Brix purchased a boat house and wrecked it, and with the lumber thus obtained, built a barn. No sooner was this completed, than they were compelled to move into it, because the Grounds house was again wanted by the owner, and there was no other house available.

    In 1883 he built the house which is still standing, and is now owned by the Kendol family. The building spot was then, covered by a number of large spruce trees. These had to be felled and burned by means of boring augur holes into them from the top and sides as was the custom at that time. The limbs were cut into cord wood and sold to sailing scows that took it to Astoria for fuel.

    Mr. H.P. Andresen gave them a cow and a pig for a start and that was a wonderful help in getting started. The house situated as it was on the river bank, because a sort of free hotel or half way house for travelers, who were weary from rowing long distances on their way up river. None were turned away hungry-friend or stranger alike shared the best they then had.

    One morning at daybreak they heard a terrible squealing just across the river-now the Heldt place-where a neighbor, Fritz Hoeck. had a pig among the down trees back of his house,The men rushed over, knowing it was a bear after the pig, but they only succeeded in wounding the bear . However they placed a loaded gun, with a string tied from the trigger to the remains of the pig, so when Mr. Bear came back again he would shoot himself. This occurred while the whole neighborhood was assembled the next day drinking coffee. It created a lot of excitement when the report of the gun startled them.

    Father and Mother Brix were naturally concerned about the schooling privileges for their children here. There was only three months' of school each year on Grays River at that time, and church and Sunday school advantages were not many. An old sailors's Chaplain Reverend McCormick came around once in a great while, but later on Rev. Stimson came to Grays River and a regular Sunday school and church was organized. The younger children became regular attendants, rowing their way to upper Grays River, often against tide and freshet. Whenever sickness occurred in the neighborhood, Mother Brix was called and often acted as both doctor and nurse combined, doing the best she knew how to relieve the distress and suffering. She ushered a great many babies into the world. On one occasion she was called onto a home where a child was suffering from what was then called "brain fever" She remained with the family and on the night the sick child died, another was born, and she was obliged to act as doctor, nurse and undertaker.

    At another time she was called to assist an expectant mother, in company with Mrs. Wm. Hoeck. It looked like the child could not be delivered, so a couple of young men were sent to Astoria in a small boat, there to charter a steamer and bring a doctor. However, when they came to the mouth of the river, it was frozen solid, and they had to turn back. Finally, after a long time, the mother was saved but the child was born dead.
    In the winter of 1888-89, the river frozen up for a long time, the ice becoming over a foot thick. This caused all travel to cease and when in the latter part of January the ice thawed out sufficiently, all the settlers on the Washington side were out of provisions. Consequently, they all went to Astoria at the first opportunity afforded them. Thus it came about the streamer Gleaner was so loaded down with feed and provisions that when she started across the Columbia from Astoria, on the first trip, that she upset not far from Tongue Point and several were drowned.

    It so happened that several of the Brix children were at Sisson creek visiting the Behnke family when the fish boat, carrying the surviving passengers from the wrecked Gleaner, landed at Starkes point, only a short distance from Sisson creek.

    The family gradually scattered as the other localities: but for a great many years they all found their way back to the old homestead at Christmas time, even after a number had families of their own. In 1897 forty years ago, the entire clan was together once more. There was a big southwest storm raging and the high tide and resultant freshet combined, brought the water up to the floor of the house which was about four feet from the ground. The cows in the barn stood knee deep in water, and the boys found "Old Aunty" and Uncle" who lived a quarter of a mile up river, trying to sweep the water out of their house with a broom. This was the "Old Aunty" and "Uncle" who came out with the Brix family, and were then living on the Chas. Runge place, directly across from where the Rosburg store was then located, while the Rosburgs lived there and kept the store.
    The old homestead was covered with a lot of tide land spruce timber and that served as a nucleus to start all the boys in the logging industry. At first the trees were felled so they could be rolled into the river with :jack Screws" or logging jacks; later the sloughs in the tide-land were cleaned out at low tide, the logs rolled into them and then floated out on the big tides which usually came when a southwest storm was raging.

    DEC 23, 1937 page 6
    In this way all the boys became interested in the logging industry. Asmus and Albert ventured out for themselves, logging at various places, but principally around Grays Bay. Logging at that time was carried on with oxen as the chief means of transportation from the woods to the water. Only about 8 months or less of the year being utilized because the rainy season made it almost impossible to work with ox teams. The greater part of the time that oxen were used by Asmus and Albert, P. John was the teamster. This was at that time about the highest paid job in the woods-$100 per month-as it necessitated a lot of skill to drive six yokes of oxen with only a good stick to guide them with and the human voice to persuade them to pull together at the right time. Also, the teamster or "bull-puncher" as he was called, had to get up before daylight and work late at night to keep his teams in good physical condition to do the work.

    Herman and Anton, the two youngest boys, did not get into extensive logging before Herman met with a fatal accident, at the age of 17 years, in 1895. This occurred on the present J. King place, which was then owned and operated by Margaretha, the oldest Brix daughter, and her husband, J. H. Erp. He fell over 20 feet from a barn which Anton and he were helping to construct at that time. The only way of getting him to the hospital in Astoria was by sled to where a skiff could be rowed down the river. It so happened that the Grays River steamer had already gone out on the tide and that made it necessary to row on down to Barneys Point, or Frankfort, and there again transfer to a sailing fish boat. There was no wind that night and Anton and the owner of the fish boat rowed until late in the night before they finally arrived at Astoria. However, from the severe injuries sustained the end came at five o'clock the next morning, and Herman was brought back to his parents at Grays River a corpse. The day of Herman's funeral a very near additional tragedy occurred. Two boats started from Rosburg's store to the Brix home, one occupied by Helene Brix, Mrs. Albert Brix and baby Myrtle Brix and the other with Grandmother P.F. Brix and Lester, the other Albert Brix child. The man that was to row the latter boat gave it a hard push from the bank intending to jump in on the bow as was his custom. In doing so he lost his balance and upset Grandmother Brix and Lester in mid stream. Luckily, Helene, in the other boat got a hold on her mother and Mrs. Albert Brix grabbed her little son Lester holding them up in the water. The elder Rosburgs (Mrs Albert Brix's parents) stood on the bank helplessly wringing their hands, for here was no other boat available at the time. Finally Wm. Hoeck came along in another boat and rescued them. However, Grandmother Brix had gotten quite a bit of water in her lungs and recovery seemed doubtful for awhile.

    Some years later the four remaining boys, Asmus, Albert, P. John and Anton, gathered their combined resources together and formed the Grays Bay Logging Co. at Sisson Creek. This operation lasted a long term of years. Its logging railroad finally extending over the divide to the Naselle country and a large body of timber was eventually brought to the market.

    In the beginning Asmus was the bookkeeper, P. John was the woods manager, Albert did the outside selling of logs, etc. Anton had charge of railroad construction. This combination worked out well for a number of years until Asmus sold his interests to his younger brothers and Anton moved to Tacoma to persue studies at the College of Puget Sound. Albert and P. John were left to carry on the business. The Company finally purchased the Knappton mill and Albert had charge of it for a few years but finally sold his interests to P. John and went into a wholesale lumber business at Portland. That left P. John alone to carry on in the logging game.

    A few years later Albert suffered a stroke when he was 55 years old from which he did not recover. His daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Buehner, of Portland had three children two boys and a girl all on their way to maturity. His son, Lester has two children and one grandchild.

    Asmus did not have any children but became interested in a variety of activities in Astoria after he sold out his logging interests. He overcame a severe illness in the earlier part of his career, which kept him in bed for 18 months. He was also active in civic affairs being council man for a number of years, chairman of the Ways and means committee and president of the Council in 1900. He owned a farm near Claskinine in which he took much pleasure. It was on one of his return trips from this farm that he suffered a heart attack and succumbed while in his car April 31, 1924, when he was 60 years old. He left all his estate to his nieces and nephews.
    After P. John purchased the major portion of the stock in the Original company he was very successful in managing it for a number of years. He finally became interested in a great many other concerns and is the leading factor in them to this day. He lived in Astoria until 1918 when he found it necessary to move to Portland there better to direct his varied activities and he has three children, Herbert, Irene and John. All are now married and have children of their own. (continued next week)

    DEC 30, 1937
    After Anton moved to Tacoma he took a regular course of study in the College of Puget Sound while his own children were in the lower grades. He finally entered the lumber business again on Puget Sound and had several operations up there.

    In 1930 he moved back to the Columbia River distinct and has been logging there at various locations ever since. He is now living at Knappton where he is manager of the Knappton Logging Co.
    His children are all grown and married except Anna, who is still single and doing research work at University of Washington.

    His oldest son, Walter is woods supt. for the Knappton Logging Co. and has two daughters in their teens. His oldest daughter Helen, has two little girls and living with her husband on a farm at Carlton, Washington. Egbert, next to his oldest son, is teaching at Goke school in Seattle and Herman the youngest son, is living in Hollywood, where he starred in several pictures, During his college career, he gained lots of publicity as athlete, both in football and as a shot-putter, coming within a small margin of getting the world's prize at Amsterdam in 1928.

    The oldest daughter of the original Brix family, Margaretha, cooked for her brothers in the logging camp for some years, when she was a young woman and had no small share in helping the other boys get on their feet. She married J. H. Erp in 1891 and settled on the place originally owned by H.O. Lamb. where she lived with her family for 16 years. They then purchased the Baker place in 1907 and a few years later sold the old place to the late George Anderson. After Grandmother Brix died at Astoria where she and Grandfather Brix spent their last years. Margaretha and her husband moved to Astoria where she cared for Grandfather Brix until he passed away at the ripe age of 85 and Mr. Erp died two years later.

    Margaretha has two sons and one daughter. All are married and have families. Herman, of Astoria, has three children, Anton is living on a farm near Chehalis and has one daughter and Lorena, of Salem, has two daughters. Margaretha now makes her home in Salem near her daughter, Lorena.

    The youngest daughter of the original Brix family was Helen, who became the wife of Henry Hoeck in 1898. She died Sept. 3, 1928 and left two daughters Marie and Eva, the latter now being Mrs. Joseph Morgan and has one small boy child. Her only son only outlive his mother a little over a year and her eldest daughter Margaret died five years before her mother.

    Christop, the boy next to P. John in the original Brix family lived only a few years after the family came to Grays River. He was taken by some aliment Nov. 8, 1888 when he was only five years old.

    Thus Father and Mother Brix reared their children amid the surroundings of the early pioneers of their day. They have now passed on a generation ago but many a spot on Grays River still brings back endearing memories of those days when life for us still was in the early spring. A few days ago we felt an urge to stop our car and find the spot where the little old rough school house once stood on the river bank on the old Wilson place, now the Swanback place. How it thrilled us to stand there and live once again in fancy, the lessons we there learned and the games we there played.

    Birth:
    Kragelund

    Albert married Rosburg, Emile Alvina on 24 Mar 1892 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA. Emile (daughter of Rosburg, CHRISTIAN Johann Julius and Brix, Maria Dorathea) was born on 6 Oct 1875 in Keystone, Benton, Iowa, USA; died on 23 Apr 1939 in Salinas, Monterey, California, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Rosburg, Emile AlvinaRosburg, Emile Alvina was born on 6 Oct 1875 in Keystone, Benton, Iowa, USA (daughter of Rosburg, CHRISTIAN Johann Julius and Brix, Maria Dorathea); died on 23 Apr 1939 in Salinas, Monterey, California, USA.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Family Home of Christian Rosburg

    Children:
    1. Brix, Lester Albert was born on 8 Dec 1893 in Washington, USA; died on 2 Feb 1964 in Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles, California, USA.
    2. 1. Brix, Myrtle Alvina was born on 1 Oct 1895 in Necanicum, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; died on 1 Nov 1979 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Brix, Peter Friedrich was born on 28 Oct 1835 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died in 1925 in Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; was buried in 1925 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 29 Jun 1887, Grays River, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA
    • Residence: 1900, Deep River, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA
    • Residence: 1910, Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA
    • Residence: 1920, Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; StreetAddress: Exchange Street; Age: 84; Occupation: None; AbleToSpeakEnglish: Yes; CanRead: Yes; CanWrite: Yes; EnumerationDistrict: 62; HomeMortgaged: Free; HomeOwnership: Owned; LanguageSpoken: German; NaturalizationStatus: Naturalized; MaritalStatus: Widowed; RelationToHead: Head

    Notes:

    December 9, 1937, the Grays River Builder newspaper had a story written by Harriet Alta Meserve, the editor. On the Brix family here is a copy of what it said.

    The story of the Brix family is largely the result of facts and incidents remembered and collected by Mrs. Margaretha Erp, the oldest survivor of the original Brix children, with the help of P.J. Brix and Anton H. Brix who are the only other two now living from the first generation.

    However, there are now, all told 36 living descendants, including children, grand children, great-grandchildren and one only great great grandchild, of the original Brix family of which Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Brix were the original parents.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix came to Grays River 56 years ago, in 1881. They brought with them in chronological order from the oldest down, seven children Albert, Margaretha, P. John, Christoph, Helene, Anton and Herman.

    Asmus, the oldest son, had come to Grays River two years earlier in company with Peter Sorensen and Anton Sorensen in 1879, when he was 15 years old. Anton Sorensen returning at that time from Denmark with his bride; also bringing Asmus with him from Germany to H.P. Andresen, who was Asmus uncle. Here Asmus lived until the rest of the family arrived in 1881.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix, with the other members of the family and also an old aunt and uncle of mother Brix, Mr. and Mrs. H.P. Henningsen, left their home in Schleswig-Holstein Germany, April 28, 1881. They were then 46 and 41, respectively, and were headed for mother Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen now the John Johnson place at Rosburg. Mr. H.P. Andresen had then already lived in America for 20 years, having come across the plains with a survey party, with which he at one time almost perished for the want of water. He arrived at Astoria in the 60's and settled on his homestead at the old home place in 1869.

    The Brix family left Hamburg in the spring of the years and came to London two days later. There they were transported across the city on an elevated railway a novelty at that time-to their, an English streamer. Not a word could be understood by the party They had hoped to take a german ship, but found that so many passengers were booked ahead that no passage could be obtained before fall.

    So after 3 weeks or 19 days to be exact, of seasickness and misery they landed in New York at Old Castle Garden. The next day they started west by emigrant train wherein sleepers consisted of wooden boards placed between the upturned seats like an extension table. each one supplied his own bedding, as none was furnished.

    The night of the second day on the train brought them to Pittsburgh. After the smaller children were put to bed, the conductor came through and called out something that no one understood, but when the train stopped and they saw passengers getting off, they knew it meant "change cars".

    In the scramble the afore mentioned "old aunty" left her bag of lump sugar on the window sill, and that was a serious matter for she needed it for her coffee. The next stop was at Chicago and father Brix ventured out in an effort to replace the lump sugar and procure some kerosene for aunty's little oil stove which she had brought with her to cook her afternoon coffee on. He met on the street what was known as as "emigrant Fleecer." A man accosted him in the German language and offered to show him a store where he could procure his requirements. They only went a short distance when he was either slugged or drugged. At any rate, when he regained consciousness, his money was all missing. There they were a large family of small children, on their way west on an emigrant train, without anything with which to buy food.

    Fortunately, old uncle still had a little with him, and the entire party had to subsist on his small savings. when they reached Council Bluffs, their tickets were challenged. They were told they must have a half fare for one of the others. Finally an attachment was placed on their baggage and they were allowed to go on to San Francisco. What a predicament! Without funds and tickets still to be purchased from San Francisco to Astoria.
    Fortunately, they found a hotel keeper in San Francisco who could speak their language, and he succeeded in getting their baggage released. They then boarded ship again for the railroad was then not built north from San Francisco.

    It was arranged that a young man, Herman Hansel, whose family lived on the old Schobie place, later the Bergman place and now the Cook place, was to meet them at Astoria and take them to the old Occidental hotel in case neither Asmus or the Andresens could be there.

    However, as they came down the gang plank from the streamer, State of California, Mrs. Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen, grabbed her large bag which she was carrying. Not expecting to see her brother there, Mrs. Brix did not recognize him, and resisted vigorously. But soon a happy greeting followed, after she had recognized her escort.

    Mr. and Mrs. Andresen had come over to Astoria in a skiff to meet them, but it was finally arranged to have the small streamer, Rosetta, take the whole party to Grays River. For some reason, however-whether on account of low tides or the captain's unfamiliarity with the Grays River channel-the stopped off at Knappton where they spent the night.

    The next day they entered lower Grays River and saw for the first time a number of bears climbing up trees along the river bank, and landed at the H.P. Andresen place at the mouth of the small creek near where the Rosburg store now stands. They all lived with the Andresens for about six weeks, when they moved down to the Grounds place, later known as the Amundson place.

    Asmus had purchased a small fraction of land and cleared a plot and planted a garden. This, of course was thankfully received and proved a big help, when the family moved onto the place, which was then a wilderness of large trees, vine maple and underbrush. Father Brix purchased a boat house and wrecked it, and with the lumber thus obtained, built a barn. No sooner was this completed, than they were compelled to move into it, because the Grounds house was again wanted by the owner, and there was no other house available.

    In 1883 he built the house which is still standing, and is now owned by the Kendol family. The building spot was then, covered by a number of large spruce trees. These had to be felled and burned by means of boring augur holes into them from the top and sides as was the custom at that time. The limbs were cut into cord wood and sold to sailing scows that took it to Astoria for fuel.

    Mr. H.P. Andresen gave them a cow and a pig for a start and that was a wonderful help in getting started. The house situated as it was on the river bank, because a sort of free hotel or half way house for travelers, who were weary from rowing long distances on their way up river. None were turned away hungry-friend or stranger alike shared the best they then had.

    One morning at daybreak they heard a terrible squealing just across the river-now the Heldt place-where a neighbor, Fritz Hoeck. had a pig among the down trees back of his house,The men rushed over, knowing it was a bear after the pig, but they only succeeded in wounding the bear . However they placed a loaded gun, with a string tied from the trigger to the remains of the pig, so when Mr. Bear came back again he would shoot himself. This occurred while the whole neighborhood was assembled the next day drinking coffee. It created a lot of excitement when the report of the gun startled them.

    Father and Mother Brix were naturally concerned about the schooling privileges for their children here. There was only three months' of school each year on Grays River at that time, and church and Sunday school advantages were not many. An old sailors's Chaplain Reverend McCormick came around once in a great while, but later on Rev. Stimson came to Grays River and a regular Sunday school and church was organized. The younger children became regular attendants, rowing their way to upper Grays River, often against tide and freshet. Whenever sickness occurred in the neighborhood, Mother Brix was called and often acted as both doctor and nurse combined, doing the best she knew how to relieve the distress and suffering. She ushered a great many babies into the world. On one occasion she was called onto a home where a child was suffering from what was then called "brain fever" She remained with the family and on the night the sick child died, another was born, and she was obliged to act as doctor, nurse and undertaker.

    At another time she was called to assist an expectant mother, in company with Mrs. Wm. Hoeck. It looked like the child could not be delivered, so a couple of young men were sent to Astoria in a small boat, there to charter a steamer and bring a doctor. However, when they came to the mouth of the river, it was frozen solid, and they had to turn back. Finally, after a long time, the mother was saved but the child was born dead.
    In the winter of 1888-89, the river frozen up for a long time, the ice becoming over a foot thick. This caused all travel to cease and when in the latter part of January the ice thawed out sufficiently, all the settlers on the Washington side were out of provisions. Consequently, they all went to Astoria at the first opportunity afforded them. Thus it came about the streamer Gleaner was so loaded down with feed and provisions that when she started across the Columbia from Astoria, on the first trip, that she upset not far from Tongue Point and several were drowned.

    It so happened that several of the Brix children were at Sisson creek visiting the Behnke family when the fish boat, carrying the surviving passengers from the wrecked Gleaner, landed at Starkes point, only a short distance from Sisson creek.

    The family gradually scattered as the other localities: but for a great many years they all found their way back to the old homestead at Christmas time, even after a number had families of their own. In 1897 forty years ago, the entire clan was together once more. There was a big southwest storm raging and the high tide and resultant freshet combined, brought the water up to the floor of the house which was about four feet from the ground. The cows in the barn stood knee deep in water, and the boys found "Old Aunty" and Uncle" who lived a quarter of a mile up river, trying to sweep the water out of their house with a broom. This was the "Old Aunty" and "Uncle" who came out with the Brix family, and were then living on the Chas. Runge place, directly across from where the Rosburg store was then located, while the Rosburgs lived there and kept the store.
    The old homestead was covered with a lot of tide land spruce timber and that served as a nucleus to start all the boys in the logging industry. At first the trees were felled so they could be rolled into the river with :jack Screws" or logging jacks; later the sloughs in the tide-land were cleaned out at low tide, the logs rolled into them and then floated out on the big tides which usually came when a southwest storm was raging.

    DEC 23, 1937 page 6
    In this way all the boys became interested in the logging industry. Asmus and Albert ventured out for themselves, logging at various places, but principally around Grays Bay. Logging at that time was carried on with oxen as the chief means of transportation from the woods to the water. Only about 8 months or less of the year being utilized because the rainy season made it almost impossible to work with ox teams. The greater part of the time that oxen were used by Asmus and Albert, P. John was the teamster. This was at that time about the highest paid job in the woods-$100 per month-as it necessitated a lot of skill to drive six yokes of oxen with only a good stick to guide them with and the human voice to persuade them to pull together at the right time. Also, the teamster or "bull-puncher" as he was called, had to get up before daylight and work late at night to keep his teams in good physical condition to do the work.

    Herman and Anton, the two youngest boys, did not get into extensive logging before Herman met with a fatal accident, at the age of 17 years, in 1895. This occurred on the present J. King place, which was then owned and operated by Margaretha, the oldest Brix daughter, and her husband, J. H. Erp. He fell over 20 feet from a barn which Anton and he were helping to construct at that time. The only way of getting him to the hospital in Astoria was by sled to where a skiff could be rowed down the river. It so happened that the Grays River steamer had already gone out on the tide and that made it necessary to row on down to Barneys Point, or Frankfort, and there again transfer to a sailing fish boat. There was no wind that night and Anton and the owner of the fish boat rowed until late in the night before they finally arrived at Astoria. However, from the severe injuries sustained the end came at five o'clock the next morning, and Herman was brought back to his parents at Grays River a corpse. The day of Herman's funeral a very near additional tragedy occurred. Two boats started from Rosburg's store to the Brix home, one occupied by Helene Brix, Mrs. Albert Brix and baby Myrtle Brix and the other with Grandmother P.F. Brix and Lester, the other Albert Brix child. The man that was to row the latter boat gave it a hard push from the bank intending to jump in on the bow as was his custom. In doing so he lost his balance and upset Grandmother Brix and Lester in mid stream. Luckily, Helene, in the other boat got a hold on her mother and Mrs. Albert Brix grabbed her little son Lester holding them up in the water. The elder Rosburgs (Mrs Albert Brix's parents) stood on the bank helplessly wringing their hands, for here was no other boat available at the time. Finally Wm. Hoeck came along in another boat and rescued them. However, Grandmother Brix had gotten quite a bit of water in her lungs and recovery seemed doubtful for awhile.

    Some years later the four remaining boys, Asmus, Albert, P. John and Anton, gathered their combined resources together and formed the Grays Bay Logging Co. at Sisson Creek. This operation lasted a long term of years. Its logging railroad finally extending over the divide to the Naselle country and a large body of timber was eventually brought to the market.

    In the beginning Asmus was the bookkeeper, P. John was the woods manager, Albert did the outside selling of logs, etc. Anton had charge of railroad construction. This combination worked out well for a number of years until Asmus sold his interests to his younger brothers and Anton moved to Tacoma to persue studies at the College of Puget Sound. Albert and P. John were left to carry on the business. The Company finally purchased the Knappton mill and Albert had charge of it for a few years but finally sold his interests to P. John and went into a wholesale lumber business at Portland. That left P. John alone to carry on in the logging game.

    A few years later Albert suffered a stroke when he was 55 years old from which he did not recover. His daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Buehner, of Portland had three children two boys and a girl all on their way to maturity. His son, Lester has two children and one grandchild.

    Asmus did not have any children but became interested in a variety of activities in Astoria after he sold out his logging interests. He overcame a severe illness in the earlier part of his career, which kept him in bed for 18 months. He was also active in civic affairs being council man for a number of years, chairman of the Ways and means committee and president of the Council in 1900. He owned a farm near Claskinine in which he took much pleasure. It was on one of his return trips from this farm that he suffered a heart attack and succumbed while in his car April 31, 1924, when he was 60 years old. He left all his estate to his nieces and nephews.
    After P. John purchased the major portion of the stock in the Original company he was very successful in managing it for a number of years. He finally became interested in a great many other concerns and is the leading factor in them to this day. He lived in Astoria until 1918 when he found it necessary to move to Portland there better to direct his varied activities and he has three children, Herbert, Irene and John. All are now married and have children of their own. (continued next week)

    DEC 30, 1937
    After Anton moved to Tacoma he took a regular course of study in the College of Puget Sound while his own children were in the lower grades. He finally entered the lumber business again on Puget Sound and had several operations up there.

    In 1930 he moved back to the Columbia River distinct and has been logging there at various locations ever since. He is now living at Knappton where he is manager of the Knappton Logging Co.
    His children are all grown and married except Anna, who is still single and doing research work at University of Washington.

    His oldest son, Walter is woods supt. for the Knappton Logging Co. and has two daughters in their teens. His oldest daughter Helen, has two little girls and living with her husband on a farm at Carlton, Washington. Egbert, next to his oldest son, is teaching at Goke school in Seattle and Herman the youngest son, is living in Hollywood, where he starred in several pictures, During his college career, he gained lots of publicity as athlete, both in football and as a shot-putter, coming within a small margin of getting the world's prize at Amsterdam in 1928.

    The oldest daughter of the original Brix family, Margaretha, cooked for her brothers in the logging camp for some years, when she was a young woman and had no small share in helping the other boys get on their feet. She married J. H. Erp in 1891 and settled on the place originally owned by H.O. Lamb. where she lived with her family for 16 years. They then purchased the Baker place in 1907 and a few years later sold the old place to the late George Anderson. After Grandmother Brix died at Astoria where she and Grandfather Brix spent their last years. Margaretha and her husband moved to Astoria where she cared for Grandfather Brix until he passed away at the ripe age of 85 and Mr. Erp died two years later.

    Margaretha has two sons and one daughter. All are married and have families. Herman, of Astoria, has three children, Anton is living on a farm near Chehalis and has one daughter and Lorena, of Salem, has two daughters. Margaretha now makes her home in Salem near her daughter, Lorena.

    The youngest daughter of the original Brix family was Helen, who became the wife of Henry Hoeck in 1898. She died Sept. 3, 1928 and left two daughters Marie and Eva, the latter now being Mrs. Joseph Morgan and has one small boy child. Her only son only outlive his mother a little over a year and her eldest daughter Margaret died five years before her mother.

    Christop, the boy next to P. John in the original Brix family lived only a few years after the family came to Grays River. He was taken by some aliment Nov. 8, 1888 when he was only five years old.

    Thus Father and Mother Brix reared their children amid the surroundings of the early pioneers of their day. They have now passed on a generation ago but many a spot on Grays River still brings back endearing memories of those days when life for us still was in the early spring. A few days ago we felt an urge to stop our car and find the spot where the little old rough school house once stood on the river bank on the old Wilson place, now the Swanback place. How it thrilled us to stand there and live once again in fancy, the lessons we there learned and the games we there played.

    Peter married Andreson, Mary Christina in 1864 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Mary was born on 16 Feb 1840 in Germany; died on 19 Oct 1917 in Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; was buried after 19 Oct 1917 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Andreson, Mary Christina was born on 16 Feb 1840 in Germany; died on 19 Oct 1917 in Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; was buried after 19 Oct 1917 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 29 Jun 1887, Grays River, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA
    • Residence: 1900, Grays River, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; Age: 60; AbleToSpeakEnglish: Yes; CanRead: Yes; CanWrite: Yes; EnumerationDistrict: 0229; NumberOfChildrenBorn: 8; NumberOfChildrenLiving: 6; YearsInUS: 19; YearsMarried: 36; MaritalStatus: Married; RelationToHead: Wife
    • Residence: 1910, Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA
    • Residence: 1910, Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon, USA; Age: 70; MaritalStatus: Married; RelationToHead: Wife

    Notes:

    December 9, 1937, the Grays River Builder newspaper had a story written by Harriet Alta Meserve, the editor. On the Brix family here is a copy of what it said.

    The story of the Brix family is largely the result of facts and incidents remembered and collected by Mrs. Margaretha Erp, the oldest survivor of the original Brix children, with the help of P.J. Brix and Anton H. Brix who are the only other two now living from the first generation.

    However, there are now, all told 36 living descendants, including children, grand children, great-grandchildren and one only great great grandchild, of the original Brix family of which Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Brix were the original parents.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix came to Grays River 56 years ago, in 1881. They brought with them in chronological order from the oldest down, seven children Albert, Margaretha, P. John, Christoph, Helene, Anton and Herman.

    Asmus, the oldest son, had come to Grays River two years earlier in company with Peter Sorensen and Anton Sorensen in 1879, when he was 15 years old. Anton Sorensen returning at that time from Denmark with his bride; also bringing Asmus with him from Germany to H.P. Andresen, who was Asmus uncle. Here Asmus lived until the rest of the family arrived in 1881.

    Father and mother P.F. Brix, with the other members of the family and also an old aunt and uncle of mother Brix, Mr. and Mrs. H.P. Henningsen, left their home in Schleswig-Holstein Germany, April 28, 1881. They were then 46 and 41, respectively, and were headed for mother Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen now the John Johnson place at Rosburg. Mr. H.P. Andresen had then already lived in America for 20 years, having come across the plains with a survey party, with which he at one time almost perished for the want of water. He arrived at Astoria in the 60's and settled on his homestead at the old home place in 1869.

    The Brix family left Hamburg in the spring of the years and came to London two days later. There they were transported across the city on an elevated railway a novelty at that time-to their, an English streamer. Not a word could be understood by the party They had hoped to take a german ship, but found that so many passengers were booked ahead that no passage could be obtained before fall.

    So after 3 weeks or 19 days to be exact, of seasickness and misery they landed in New York at Old Castle Garden. The next day they started west by emigrant train wherein sleepers consisted of wooden boards placed between the upturned seats like an extension table. each one supplied his own bedding, as none was furnished.

    The night of the second day on the train brought them to Pittsburgh. After the smaller children were put to bed, the conductor came through and called out something that no one understood, but when the train stopped and they saw passengers getting off, they knew it meant "change cars".

    In the scramble the afore mentioned "old aunty" left her bag of lump sugar on the window sill, and that was a serious matter for she needed it for her coffee. The next stop was at Chicago and father Brix ventured out in an effort to replace the lump sugar and procure some kerosene for aunty's little oil stove which she had brought with her to cook her afternoon coffee on. He met on the street what was known as as "emigrant Fleecer." A man accosted him in the German language and offered to show him a store where he could procure his requirements. They only went a short distance when he was either slugged or drugged. At any rate, when he regained consciousness, his money was all missing. There they were a large family of small children, on their way west on an emigrant train, without anything with which to buy food.

    Fortunately, old uncle still had a little with him, and the entire party had to subsist on his small savings. when they reached Council Bluffs, their tickets were challenged. They were told they must have a half fare for one of the others. Finally an attachment was placed on their baggage and they were allowed to go on to San Francisco. What a predicament! Without funds and tickets still to be purchased from San Francisco to Astoria.
    Fortunately, they found a hotel keeper in San Francisco who could speak their language, and he succeeded in getting their baggage released. They then boarded ship again for the railroad was then not built north from San Francisco.

    It was arranged that a young man, Herman Hansel, whose family lived on the old Schobie place, later the Bergman place and now the Cook place, was to meet them at Astoria and take them to the old Occidental hotel in case neither Asmus or the Andresens could be there.

    However, as they came down the gang plank from the streamer, State of California, Mrs. Brix's brother, H.P. Andresen, grabbed her large bag which she was carrying. Not expecting to see her brother there, Mrs. Brix did not recognize him, and resisted vigorously. But soon a happy greeting followed, after she had recognized her escort.

    Mr. and Mrs. Andresen had come over to Astoria in a skiff to meet them, but it was finally arranged to have the small streamer, Rosetta, take the whole party to Grays River. For some reason, however-whether on account of low tides or the captain's unfamiliarity with the Grays River channel-the stopped off at Knappton where they spent the night.

    The next day they entered lower Grays River and saw for the first time a number of bears climbing up trees along the river bank, and landed at the H.P. Andresen place at the mouth of the small creek near where the Rosburg store now stands. They all lived with the Andresens for about six weeks, when they moved down to the Grounds place, later known as the Amundson place.

    Asmus had purchased a small fraction of land and cleared a plot and planted a garden. This, of course was thankfully received and proved a big help, when the family moved onto the place, which was then a wilderness of large trees, vine maple and underbrush. Father Brix purchased a boat house and wrecked it, and with the lumber thus obtained, built a barn. No sooner was this completed, than they were compelled to move into it, because the Grounds house was again wanted by the owner, and there was no other house available.

    In 1883 he built the house which is still standing, and is now owned by the Kendol family. The building spot was then, covered by a number of large spruce trees. These had to be felled and burned by means of boring augur holes into them from the top and sides as was the custom at that time. The limbs were cut into cord wood and sold to sailing scows that took it to Astoria for fuel.

    Mr. H.P. Andresen gave them a cow and a pig for a start and that was a wonderful help in getting started. The house situated as it was on the river bank, because a sort of free hotel or half way house for travelers, who were weary from rowing long distances on their way up river. None were turned away hungry-friend or stranger alike shared the best they then had.

    One morning at daybreak they heard a terrible squealing just across the river-now the Heldt place-where a neighbor, Fritz Hoeck. had a pig among the down trees back of his house,The men rushed over, knowing it was a bear after the pig, but they only succeeded in wounding the bear . However they placed a loaded gun, with a string tied from the trigger to the remains of the pig, so when Mr. Bear came back again he would shoot himself. This occurred while the whole neighborhood was assembled the next day drinking coffee. It created a lot of excitement when the report of the gun startled them.

    Father and Mother Brix were naturally concerned about the schooling privileges for their children here. There was only three months' of school each year on Grays River at that time, and church and Sunday school advantages were not many. An old sailors's Chaplain Reverend McCormick came around once in a great while, but later on Rev. Stimson came to Grays River and a regular Sunday school and church was organized. The younger children became regular attendants, rowing their way to upper Grays River, often against tide and freshet. Whenever sickness occurred in the neighborhood, Mother Brix was called and often acted as both doctor and nurse combined, doing the best she knew how to relieve the distress and suffering. She ushered a great many babies into the world. On one occasion she was called onto a home where a child was suffering from what was then called "brain fever" She remained with the family and on the night the sick child died, another was born, and she was obliged to act as doctor, nurse and undertaker.

    At another time she was called to assist an expectant mother, in company with Mrs. Wm. Hoeck. It looked like the child could not be delivered, so a couple of young men were sent to Astoria in a small boat, there to charter a steamer and bring a doctor. However, when they came to the mouth of the river, it was frozen solid, and they had to turn back. Finally, after a long time, the mother was saved but the child was born dead.
    In the winter of 1888-89, the river frozen up for a long time, the ice becoming over a foot thick. This caused all travel to cease and when in the latter part of January the ice thawed out sufficiently, all the settlers on the Washington side were out of provisions. Consequently, they all went to Astoria at the first opportunity afforded them. Thus it came about the streamer Gleaner was so loaded down with feed and provisions that when she started across the Columbia from Astoria, on the first trip, that she upset not far from Tongue Point and several were drowned.

    It so happened that several of the Brix children were at Sisson creek visiting the Behnke family when the fish boat, carrying the surviving passengers from the wrecked Gleaner, landed at Starkes point, only a short distance from Sisson creek.

    The family gradually scattered as the other localities: but for a great many years they all found their way back to the old homestead at Christmas time, even after a number had families of their own. In 1897 forty years ago, the entire clan was together once more. There was a big southwest storm raging and the high tide and resultant freshet combined, brought the water up to the floor of the house which was about four feet from the ground. The cows in the barn stood knee deep in water, and the boys found "Old Aunty" and Uncle" who lived a quarter of a mile up river, trying to sweep the water out of their house with a broom. This was the "Old Aunty" and "Uncle" who came out with the Brix family, and were then living on the Chas. Runge place, directly across from where the Rosburg store was then located, while the Rosburgs lived there and kept the store.
    The old homestead was covered with a lot of tide land spruce timber and that served as a nucleus to start all the boys in the logging industry. At first the trees were felled so they could be rolled into the river with :jack Screws" or logging jacks; later the sloughs in the tide-land were cleaned out at low tide, the logs rolled into them and then floated out on the big tides which usually came when a southwest storm was raging.

    DEC 23, 1937 page 6
    In this way all the boys became interested in the logging industry. Asmus and Albert ventured out for themselves, logging at various places, but principally around Grays Bay. Logging at that time was carried on with oxen as the chief means of transportation from the woods to the water. Only about 8 months or less of the year being utilized because the rainy season made it almost impossible to work with ox teams. The greater part of the time that oxen were used by Asmus and Albert, P. John was the teamster. This was at that time about the highest paid job in the woods-$100 per month-as it necessitated a lot of skill to drive six yokes of oxen with only a good stick to guide them with and the human voice to persuade them to pull together at the right time. Also, the teamster or "bull-puncher" as he was called, had to get up before daylight and work late at night to keep his teams in good physical condition to do the work.

    Herman and Anton, the two youngest boys, did not get into extensive logging before Herman met with a fatal accident, at the age of 17 years, in 1895. This occurred on the present J. King place, which was then owned and operated by Margaretha, the oldest Brix daughter, and her husband, J. H. Erp. He fell over 20 feet from a barn which Anton and he were helping to construct at that time. The only way of getting him to the hospital in Astoria was by sled to where a skiff could be rowed down the river. It so happened that the Grays River steamer had already gone out on the tide and that made it necessary to row on down to Barneys Point, or Frankfort, and there again transfer to a sailing fish boat. There was no wind that night and Anton and the owner of the fish boat rowed until late in the night before they finally arrived at Astoria. However, from the severe injuries sustained the end came at five o'clock the next morning, and Herman was brought back to his parents at Grays River a corpse. The day of Herman's funeral a very near additional tragedy occurred. Two boats started from Rosburg's store to the Brix home, one occupied by Helene Brix, Mrs. Albert Brix and baby Myrtle Brix and the other with Grandmother P.F. Brix and Lester, the other Albert Brix child. The man that was to row the latter boat gave it a hard push from the bank intending to jump in on the bow as was his custom. In doing so he lost his balance and upset Grandmother Brix and Lester in mid stream. Luckily, Helene, in the other boat got a hold on her mother and Mrs. Albert Brix grabbed her little son Lester holding them up in the water. The elder Rosburgs (Mrs Albert Brix's parents) stood on the bank helplessly wringing their hands, for here was no other boat available at the time. Finally Wm. Hoeck came along in another boat and rescued them. However, Grandmother Brix had gotten quite a bit of water in her lungs and recovery seemed doubtful for awhile.

    Some years later the four remaining boys, Asmus, Albert, P. John and Anton, gathered their combined resources together and formed the Grays Bay Logging Co. at Sisson Creek. This operation lasted a long term of years. Its logging railroad finally extending over the divide to the Naselle country and a large body of timber was eventually brought to the market.

    In the beginning Asmus was the bookkeeper, P. John was the woods manager, Albert did the outside selling of logs, etc. Anton had charge of railroad construction. This combination worked out well for a number of years until Asmus sold his interests to his younger brothers and Anton moved to Tacoma to persue studies at the College of Puget Sound. Albert and P. John were left to carry on the business. The Company finally purchased the Knappton mill and Albert had charge of it for a few years but finally sold his interests to P. John and went into a wholesale lumber business at Portland. That left P. John alone to carry on in the logging game.

    A few years later Albert suffered a stroke when he was 55 years old from which he did not recover. His daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Buehner, of Portland had three children two boys and a girl all on their way to maturity. His son, Lester has two children and one grandchild.

    Asmus did not have any children but became interested in a variety of activities in Astoria after he sold out his logging interests. He overcame a severe illness in the earlier part of his career, which kept him in bed for 18 months. He was also active in civic affairs being council man for a number of years, chairman of the Ways and means committee and president of the Council in 1900. He owned a farm near Claskinine in which he took much pleasure. It was on one of his return trips from this farm that he suffered a heart attack and succumbed while in his car April 31, 1924, when he was 60 years old. He left all his estate to his nieces and nephews.
    After P. John purchased the major portion of the stock in the Original company he was very successful in managing it for a number of years. He finally became interested in a great many other concerns and is the leading factor in them to this day. He lived in Astoria until 1918 when he found it necessary to move to Portland there better to direct his varied activities and he has three children, Herbert, Irene and John. All are now married and have children of their own. (continued next week)

    DEC 30, 1937
    After Anton moved to Tacoma he took a regular course of study in the College of Puget Sound while his own children were in the lower grades. He finally entered the lumber business again on Puget Sound and had several operations up there.

    In 1930 he moved back to the Columbia River distinct and has been logging there at various locations ever since. He is now living at Knappton where he is manager of the Knappton Logging Co.
    His children are all grown and married except Anna, who is still single and doing research work at University of Washington.

    His oldest son, Walter is woods supt. for the Knappton Logging Co. and has two daughters in their teens. His oldest daughter Helen, has two little girls and living with her husband on a farm at Carlton, Washington. Egbert, next to his oldest son, is teaching at Goke school in Seattle and Herman the youngest son, is living in Hollywood, where he starred in several pictures, During his college career, he gained lots of publicity as athlete, both in football and as a shot-putter, coming within a small margin of getting the world's prize at Amsterdam in 1928.

    The oldest daughter of the original Brix family, Margaretha, cooked for her brothers in the logging camp for some years, when she was a young woman and had no small share in helping the other boys get on their feet. She married J. H. Erp in 1891 and settled on the place originally owned by H.O. Lamb. where she lived with her family for 16 years. They then purchased the Baker place in 1907 and a few years later sold the old place to the late George Anderson. After Grandmother Brix died at Astoria where she and Grandfather Brix spent their last years. Margaretha and her husband moved to Astoria where she cared for Grandfather Brix until he passed away at the ripe age of 85 and Mr. Erp died two years later.

    Margaretha has two sons and one daughter. All are married and have families. Herman, of Astoria, has three children, Anton is living on a farm near Chehalis and has one daughter and Lorena, of Salem, has two daughters. Margaretha now makes her home in Salem near her daughter, Lorena.

    The youngest daughter of the original Brix family was Helen, who became the wife of Henry Hoeck in 1898. She died Sept. 3, 1928 and left two daughters Marie and Eva, the latter now being Mrs. Joseph Morgan and has one small boy child. Her only son only outlive his mother a little over a year and her eldest daughter Margaret died five years before her mother.

    Christop, the boy next to P. John in the original Brix family lived only a few years after the family came to Grays River. He was taken by some aliment Nov. 8, 1888 when he was only five years old.

    Thus Father and Mother Brix reared their children amid the surroundings of the early pioneers of their day. They have now passed on a generation ago but many a spot on Grays River still brings back endearing memories of those days when life for us still was in the early spring. A few days ago we felt an urge to stop our car and find the spot where the little old rough school house once stood on the river bank on the old Wilson place, now the Swanback place. How it thrilled us to stand there and live once again in fancy, the lessons we there learned and the games we there played.

    Children:
    1. 2. Brix, Albert was born on 7 May 1866 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 16 Feb 1921 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; was buried after 16 Feb 1921 in Wilhelm's Portland Memorial, Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA.
    2. Brix, Asmus was born on 3 Feb 1863 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 31 May 1924 in Columbia, Oregon, USA; was buried after 31 May 1924 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.
    3. Brix, Peter Johannes was born on 22 Sep 1870 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 16 Dec 1948 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; was buried after 16 Dec 1948 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.
    4. Brix, Herman was born on 20 Nov 1878 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 14 Apr 1895 in Grays River, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried after 14 Apr 1895 in Old Grays River Cemetery, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA.
    5. Brix, Helene D J was born on 21 Apr 1875 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 2 Sep 1925 in Portland, Multnomah, Oregon, USA; was buried after 2 Sep 1925 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.
    6. Brix, Christopher was born on 25 Dec 1872 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 8 Nov 1887 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried after 8 Nov 1887 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA.
    7. Brix, Anton Henry was born on 7 Jun 1877 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 28 Sep 1944 in Naselle, Pacific, Washington, USA; was buried after 28 Sep 1944 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.
    8. Brix, Margretha was born in Aug 1868 in Oersberg, Schleswig-Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 8 May 1958 in Marion, Oregon, USA; was buried after 8 May 1958 in Oceanview Cemetery, Warrenton, Clatsop, Oregon, USA.

  3. 6.  Rosburg, CHRISTIAN Johann Julius was born on 1 Mar 1832 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany (son of Rosburg, Kai Friedrich and Boehm, Margaretha Sophia); died on 8 Jun 1909 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried in Jun 1909 in Old Grays River Cemetery, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Cooper / Store Owner/ Postal Agent
    • Life Event: 19 Jan 1893, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; Postmaster

    Notes:

    The German authorities listed Christian as "escaped" when they filed their reports in 1863. It kind of proves the story that they left to avoid conscription into military service.

    In 1855 Christian was living in Wisconsin and is on the Wisconsin Territorial Census. In 1860 he is living in Read, Clayton, Iowa with his wife and son, William. By 1870 he is liiving in Luzerne, Benton, Iowa on the lot where his niece would later live with only his wife. He moved the house to Keystone, Benton, Iowa where he appears on the 1880 census. In 1885 he is shown on the Iowa census and in 1893 he is postmaster at Rosburg, Washington.

    Rosburg, Washington
    The post office opened in the 1880s after outlying neighbors had tired of the long row to Grays River for mail and appointed representatives to sail to Astoria and request a post office of their own. The mission succeeded, but finding a centrally located postmaster proved difficult. A man named Peter Nelson refused the job, even when bribed by offers to name the post office for him. Finally German immigrant CHRISTIAN ROSBURG agreed, although he had to have the job description translated into German before he understood what was expected.
    The 1890s population was large enought to warrant a community hall at ROSBURG, and its Saturday night dances became famous. People living along logging railroad tracks started for ROSBURG by handcar, then rowed and walked - - dress shoes tucked into coat pockets as protection from the mud that is inevitable where rainfall reaches 110 inches a year. Other dancers came as far as they could by fishing boat, then rode by wagon or walked with a latern "listening to see if we could hear a couger or a bear, scared to death."
    The above from EXPLORING WASHINGTON'S PAST - - A ROAD GUIDE TO HISTORY by Ruth Kirk and Carmela Alexander

    Adaptation of the name of CHRISTIAN ROSBURG, the community's first postmaster.
    From WASHINGTON STATE PLACE NAMES by James W. Phillips

    Hamlet on Grays River, 10 miles northwest of Skamokawa, west central Wahkiakum County. It was name for CHRISTIAN ROSBURG, the first postmaster.
    From PLACE NAMES OF WASHINGTON by Robert Hitchman

    My Dad's brother, Christian Rosburg had a general store in Keystone, Iowa. He moved his house from Luzerne to Keystone (about 6 miles). In Luzerne, it was located on the lot we built our stucco house. Later both brothers moved west. Christian to the State of Washington where he founded the town of Rosburg. Henry moved to Seattle, King County, Washington, where he raised his family.
    From A COLLECTION OF MEMORIES FROM "OUR FAMILY HISTORY" by Laura Maria Rosburg Kouba

    CHRISTIAN married Brix, Maria Dorathea in 1856 in Clayton, Iowa, USA. Maria was born on 18 Jun 1834 in Hannover, Hannover, Niedersachsen, Germany; died on 21 Oct 1913 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried after 21 Oct 1913 in Old Grays River Cemetery, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Brix, Maria Dorathea was born on 18 Jun 1834 in Hannover, Hannover, Niedersachsen, Germany; died on 21 Oct 1913 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried after 21 Oct 1913 in Old Grays River Cemetery, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Nickname: Alvina
    • Occupation: Housewife

    Notes:

    Data per JF Thoma. Buried in Old Grays River Cemetery.

    Children:
    1. Rosburg, William was born in 1859 in Read Township, Clayton, Iowa, USA; died before 1870 in Iowa, USA; was buried before 1870 in Iowa, USA.
    2. Rosburg, Emil Andrew was born on 14 Jun 1870 in Keystone, Benton, Iowa, USA; died on 9 Dec 1949 in Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center, Oregon City, Clackamas, Oregon, USA; was buried on 14 Dec 1949 in Carus Cemetery, Clackamas, Oregon, USA.
    3. 3. Rosburg, Emile Alvina was born on 6 Oct 1875 in Keystone, Benton, Iowa, USA; died on 23 Apr 1939 in Salinas, Monterey, California, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Rosburg, Kai Friedrich was born on 20 Jul 1791 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany (son of Rosburg, Hans Hinrich and Ratzborg, Margret Krabbe).

    Notes:

    Surname is variously spelled Ratzborg, Razborg, Rosburg.

    Kai married Boehm, Margaretha SophiaHarmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Margaretha was born in UNKNOWN in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Boehm, Margaretha Sophia was born in UNKNOWN in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
    Children:
    1. Rosburg, John Christopher was born on 1 Nov 1829 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 25 Jan 1870 in Newhall, Benton, Iowa, USA; was buried after 25 Jan 1870 in St John Lutheran Cemetery, Newhall, Benton, Iowa, USA.
    2. 6. Rosburg, CHRISTIAN Johann Julius was born on 1 Mar 1832 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 8 Jun 1909 in Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA; was buried in Jun 1909 in Old Grays River Cemetery, Rosburg, Wahkiakum, Washington, USA.
    3. Rosburg, Wulf WILLIAM Frederich was born on 12 Dec 1836 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 17 Apr 1917 in Luzerne, Benton, Iowa, USA; was buried on 20 Apr 1917 in Lutheran Cemetery, Luzerne, Benton, Iowa, USA.
    4. Rosburg, Magdalena was born on 11 Feb 1838 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 13 Sep 1917 in Benton, Iowa, USA; was buried in Sep 1917 in Keystone Cemetery, Keystone, Benton, Iowa, USA.
    5. Rosburg, HENRY George Christian was born in Aug 1839 in Harmsdorf, Ostholstein, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; died on 25 Jan 1934 in Seattle, King, Washington, USA; was buried in Jan 1934 in Lake View Cemetery, Seattle, King, Washington, USA.