Josephine History - Past and Present
Stanwood nursing home marks 100 years
"It's one of just a handful in the state to reach that milestone"
By Kaitlin Manry, Everett Herald Writer
(from an article published in the Everett
Herald - January 4th, 2008)
STANWOOD --
John Hals built the Josephine Old People's Home in the midst of great loss. His young wife,
Josephine Hals, died giving birth to their son. The baby died, too. His first wife, Elizabeth, and their two infants had died
earlier. Hals was alone.
In his grief, he reached out.
With the fortune he'd amassed running sawmills in the Stanwood area,
the Norwegian immigrant decided to build the community's first nursing home. In 1907, he donated $10,000 to the Norwegian Lutheran
Church to build a care facility in Stanwood.
A year later, between 1,000 and 1,500 people turned out to dedicate the newly built wood house to Josephine Hals.
It was the first Lutheran nursing home on the West Coast, according to Josephine administrators. Twenty-three poor men and women with
nowhere to go in their old age moved in. Two staff members came to the home daily to cook and clean.
Over the last century, Hals'
dream has grown.
The original building was torn down around 1949 and a brick nursing facility was erected. Later, three stories'
worth of assisted-living suites and nursing space were built. Classrooms that enable kids to make crafts and visit with the elderly were
added.
Today, Josephine Sunset Home has 255 employees, 160 nursing home residents, 57 people living in assisted living suites,
244 children in day care and a Montessori classroom for 4- and 5-year-olds. (The day care started for employees but has grown to include
other children in the community.)
The facility survived through tight years, in part, because of donations from Lutheran churches and
Stanwood residents. In the early 1900s, farmers donated crops to help feed the residents. Women baked bread and made jams for the
residents.
Today, Stanwood residents donate
Wii video games and television sets. They come to the facility to sing songs and lead residents in craft activities.
Ruth Painter worked in Josephine Sunset Home decades before she moved
there. In the 1970s, she washed clothes for the facility. It's grown so much since then that Painter, 84, sometimes feels lost in the
maze of hallways. Nonetheless, when she starting having health problems, she knew immediately where she wanted to go. She says she's
happy at Josephine's.
In 1914, John Hals married
again; this time to Anna Larson. He helped raise her son, Harold Larson. They traveled to Norway and settled on a farm in Stanwood. Hals
outlived his wife.
His dreamed outlived them both.
Josephine continues to grow.
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An Intergenerational Care Community