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INSIDE
Point
Roberts Town Picnic
Elsa Piper: Guest of Honor
by
Davea Fisher
July 17
was the most recent time Elsa Piper attended a Town Picnic
in Point Roberts – the first time was in 1908! This
time she was the guest of honor. Elsa enjoyed both of the picnics,
and even though she was only five years old, she says she “remembers
the joy and excitement of the first gathering.” As one
might imagine, when the early settlers got permission to homestead
their land it was one of the happiest days in the history of
Point Roberts.
Elsa Dorothea
Thorsteinson Piper was born in Point Roberts on January 7,
1903 to parents Helgi and Dagbjort. The youngest of five children,
she had two sisters, Groa and Runa, and two brothers Laugi
and Jonas. Elsa was an excellent student. In those days there
was no secondary school in Blaine, so students went to live
with family or friends in Bellingham and attended the Bellingham
high school. When Elsa graduated she went to Normal school
at Western Washington University to get her teacher’s
certificate, returning home to teach three years in Point Roberts.
Elsa later attended the University of Washington in Seattle
where she received her Masters Degree in Marine Biology. While
working on her graduate studies she discovered and named four
new species of marine crustaceans.
During
her working years she held a number of jobs including being
a nurse in Yakima and teaching nurses in San Francisco. Married
to a chemist named Finis Piper in February 1941, they made
their home in St. Louis, Missouri. They had one child, Nancy
Piper Pierce, who is now a music teacher in the Washington,
D.C. area. One hundred and one years old, Elsa lives now at
Orchard House, a retirement home in St. Louis, but she comes
back to Point Roberts every summer to the Thorsteinson farm
where she was born.
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