


New Members - November 2009
Picture taken Nov. 3rd at Deer Lagoon Grange. We were administering the Obligation to four of the five new members we added to our membership at that meeting. The new members are; Roxie and Robert Chamuler (Robert is not in the picture), Roland and Meena Prochaska, and Marta Schillinger. Master, Kenneth Schillinger, administered the obligation.
The meeting had 15 in attendance and one guest. Our guest was Norma Smith, 10th Legislative District Represenative. Norma gave a presentation on what is happening in the Washington State Legislature and her role in that activity.
Whidbey News Times Reports on the Grange - October 2009
By Jenny Manning
Whidbey News Times
October 2009
Despite Whidbey Island’s rich farming heritage, there’s a lack of longstanding grange halls on the island.
That may soon change if Chuck Prochaska, grange deputy manager of Island County, can round up enough folks to form a new grange in Coupeville and another in Oak Harbor.
Pioneer families established granges in the two island towns in 1874 and 1975, respectively, but those groups didn’t last, he said.
About 540 grange halls dotted Washington state at the organization’s peak in the 1930s and ‘40s. They helped with rural electrification efforts and in starting the state’s open primary election system, among other activities.
Locally, granges support farmers and rural interests. With the decline of the number of farm families, the number of granges in the state has declined to 260.
Prochaska hopes to reverse that trend, at least on Whidbey Island, which once hosted a handful of granges.
Deer Lagoon Grange No. 846 in Langley is the only one still in operation today, he said.
Proschaska’s research shows there was a North Whidbey Grange No. 881 chartered July 1, 1928. The list of officers for the following year showed Ben Ducken as master.
There was also a Juan de Fuca Grange No. 896 chartered in 1929. Proschaska believes the North Whidbey Grange consolidated with Juan de Fuca in 1933, with membership peaking at 123 in 1939. It relinquished its charter in 1958. Another grange, Ebey’s, apparently lost its charter in 1961.
Now, Prochaska hopes the grange can make a comeback in Oak Harbor and Coupeville.
"I believe that social conditions have changed. People are more interested," he said. "Now is the right time for the grange."
The grange caters to islanders’ broader interests, Prochaska said.
"It’s a family organization," he said, describing the organization’s three "legs," as family, community and legislative action.
Although a kick-off meeting held in Coupeville last month drew only two attendees, and another in Oak Harbor drew none, Prochaska is hopeful that the new grange charters will get off to a decent start.
Now’s the time to get in on the ground floor, he said. To stir up interest, he’s sent letters to families with old grange ties and he’s spreading the word that the modern grange is for everyone.
"It’s not just for farmers anymore," he said. "I myself am an aerospace engineer."
Contact Chuck Prochaska, 360-222-3110, for more information regarding the Coupeville or Oak Harbor grange charters.
Whidbey News Times Reporter Jenny Manning can be reached at this e-mail.
One of the DLG activities was to support the National Grange "Seed Project". This project is intended to make use of seeds that would otherwise go to waste. DLG distributed over 100 packages of seeds to the community for use in private gardens.
The DLG members pictured are L to R: Darrell Wenzek, Lois Wenzek, Chris Williams, and Chuck Prochaska. This activity was in April in conjunction with Grange week.
