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History of Early Pioneer Families of Hood River, Oregon. Compiled by Mrs. D.M. Coon
ROBERT LINDSAY AND FAMILY 1885
Robert Bruce Lindsay began life near Port Huron, Michigan,
Jan. 9, 1849. At that time Michigan was a sparsely settled country and his
opportunities for an education were extremely meager.
A few months of school each year gave him the rudiments,
more than that was obtained by his own painstaking efforts.
He developed into a large robust man with a kindly jovial
disposition, making friends easily among all classes of people. At the age
of 16 years he began work in the logging camps and lumber mills on Lake Michigan
where he performed heroic feats of strength and endurance and became very
popular in that line of work.
He moved to Wisconsin and worked in the mills of Green
Bay, being employed continuously for twenty years.
On May 21, 1873, at Chelsea, Wisconsin, he was married
to Caroline Jones, a native of that state. Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay befriended
and adopted a little girl, Tiny Kinney, raising her as their own. They were
the parents of Edith, Grace, Voyle and John Lindsay, the latter having been
born after their arrival in Hood River.
The family moved to Hood River in the spring of 1865,
and Mr. Lindsay homesteaded 160 acres in the Oak Grove district. On this
he built a home and gradually made improvements but continued to work at
the sawmill scoring logs. First he was employed by the Parker mill, then
by the Oregon Lumber Co., The Davenport mill, the Davidson Co. and the Wind
River Co. When the farm had become established on a paying basis he devoted
his entire time to farming and fruit growing. The Lindsay children were pupils
at the Oak Grove School and when they reached maturity they founded homes
of their own.
Tiny married Millard Lindsay, a younger brother of Bruce
Lindsay. Their home is in Portland, Oregon. Edith became Mrs. Charles W.
Reed, they have seven children and live in Hood River Valley on a farm. Grace
married Louis H. Arneson, a teacher. They made their home in The Dalles for
about seven years. He is now operating a service station at Corbett on the
Columbia River Highway. They have two children. Voyle married Lucy Omeg and
they have a daughter. They live at Stevenson, Washington, where he is a builder
and contractor.
John Lindsay married Susie Heaton, a native of Illinois.
They were married in January 1913 and have three sons.
For a number of years they cultivated and lived on their
farm, but now live in a neat little cottage on Montello Avenue and he is
employed by the Creamery.
Mr. Bruce Lindsay, while driving his automobile on August
19, 1918, met with an accident and received injuries from which he died two
days later. He had lived in Hood River more than thirty-three years and had
a host of friends and while his family mourned over his tragic death, they
did not mourn alone. Mrs. Lindsay did not long survive her husband. Her hip
was fractured by a fall and after a long and painful illness, she passed
away in May 1920, leaving many friends.
Grace Lindsay Arneson died January 1943.
John Lindsay died December 21, 1931.
Edith Reed died September 1945.
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