Page 1 - 2022 SWHS Spring Newsletter for website
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South Whidbey Historical Society
                             Now &TheN
                             Now &TheN











         Early Spring 2022             www.SouthWhidbeyHistory.org               www.facebook.com/SouthWhidbeyHistory


        Founder of one of South Whidbey’s earliest towns that no longer exists
        The mysterious disappearance of John G. Phinney




          Phinney might have become South    land grant.The Canadian Phinney fam-    Over the years  Arthur’s fortunes
        Whidbey's best known town instead of   ily branch increased over the genera-  waxed and waned, but then recovered
        Langley had its founder, John G. Phin-  tions. John's parents had 13 children:   to the point where he purchased the
        ney, not mysteriosuly disappeared.   eight sons and five daughters.        mill outright in 1875.
          In fact, it was Phinney who, in                                            At the time of his death in 1877,
        1881, sold 120 acres to 16-year-old   Heading West to Seek Their Fortunes  Arthur  owned  11,000  acres  in  five
        Jacob Anthes, who later became the     The three oldest sons, Arthur, John   counties  in Washington Territory,  in-
        founder of Langley.                  and James journeyed west: Arthur in   cluding more than 2,974 acres in Island
          By then, Phinney had already es-   1849, John in 1861, and James in 1862.  County, much around Oak Harbor,
        tablished a logging camp, wharf,       At age 22 Arthur sailed around Cape   Useless Bay and at Port George.
        store, and later a post office in 1884.  Horn and on up to San Francisco, CA   Port George was the area that later
          Few people know anything about     where he engaged in several ventures   became known as Phinney–for a while
        the fledgling town of Phinney situat-  for about a decade.                 at least. Old islanders may remember
        ed on what is now Columbia Beach,                                          the  Columbia  Beach  property as the
                                               In 1858 he came north to Washing-
        because it became overshadowed by    ton Territory and formed a partnership   site of the area's first automobile fer-
        its neighbor, Clinton, two miles to                                        ry dock in 1919, and later as Jim and
        the north. (This is the waterfront loca-  with  Zacharia  Amos (and  later  Wil-  John's Resort from 1946 to 1963.
        tion known as Brighton Beach or ‘Old   liam Hooke) to lease and operate a
        Clinton’.)                           sawmill in Port Ludlow that had been    Arthur Phinney was a man held in
                                             built in 1852.                        high esteem in WA Territory. His death

        Deep Colonial Roots                    In those days sawmills sought tim-  in 1877 received a lengthy and lofty
          John Phinney’s family  heritage    bered land to purchase or stake claims   write-up in the  Seattle Post-Intelli-
        stretched back to the Plymouth Colo-  on. Arthur obtained an 89-acre timber   gencer as a man of “untarnished integ-
        ny of Massachusetts.                 grant on South Whidbey that ran from   rity, straightforward in all his dealings,
          John’s eighth great-grandfather, from   Columbia Beach down near Glendale   honorable in the highest degree,  and
        Nottinghamshire, England, set sail for   signed by President Abraham Lincoln.            (Continued next page)
        Plymouth colony in 1608. His son
        was born there in 1609, and for gen-
        erations the Phinneys lived in nearby
        Barnstable, MA.
          In 1760 the English recruited farmers
        to inhabit land in Nova Scotia forcibly
        taken from the Acadians. (French de-
        scendants who had lost the French and
        Indian War against the British.)
          Isaac  Phinney (John G. Phinney’s
        great-grandfather)  moved  to Wilmot,   Loggers such as Samuel Blakelin shown above at Useless Bay in 1887 put together
        Nova Scotia and settled on a 500-acre   log booms that were floated to sawmills such as the one in Port Ludlow.
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