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There’s No Place Like Home!
...by Suzanne G. Beyer
There’s no place like Home, Washington and its past. Home City, located on the Key Peninsula in the waters of southern Puget Sound,
was considered Utopia. The forward-thinking residents were simply way ahead of their time. Their cooperative land arrangements, views on
freedom of speech, workplace conditions, equal rights, woman’s suffrage, open religion, and even (oo la la!) nude swimming were heralded
via community "alternative" publications - newspapers with names like New Era, Discontent, and Demonstrator.
Home City began with the Allen, Verity and Odell families purchasing 26 acres of land in 1896 on the northwest side of Key Peninsula’s
Von Geldern Cove. The families entrusted their original 26 acres to the newly incorporated "Home Mutual Association." Three years later,
another family, Dadisman, added 64 acres. Newcomers were provided 2-acre plots, but ownership of the land belonged to the association.
Home City families built a community of houses, stores, social halls, hotels, schools, post office, and a baseball grandstand. Residents
traded goods grown in their gardens and on their farms. However, outsiders considered the Home group a "colony of anarchists."
In 1901, President McKinley was assassinated by a professed anarchist. With that, Tacoma newspapers set out to topple Home City. After
court trials to uphold Home’s freedom of speech, in 1921 the court dissolved the Home Mutual Association. Washington State law made
cooperative land holdings illegal.
Life in Home – Past and Present
Eleen Greco, a descendent who grew up in Home City, recalled, "Every house was full of books. People talked all the time about important
things; philosophy, socialism and every other kind of ‘ism’. No subject was taboo."
Evelyn Evans and several other elders who grew up in Home City still live there. At 88 years old, she’s independent, social and active,
still drives and enjoys her close group of family and friends. Evelyn owns two acres, with her daughter residing on one of them. In fact,
two of Evelyn’s three children live in Home.
Evelyn is a direct descendent of Martin Van Buren Dadisman, her grandfather, who came from Virginia to join the three early settlers of
Home City. She describes her childhood in Home as idyllic, where children could run, play and explore. But, she vividly recalls,
"The neighbors told my dad if we kids got into mischief!" She lived with her mother, father and two siblings in two rooms adjoining the
store that her dad owned. Her father also served as Justice of the Peace where he married couples and addressed the town’s legal matters.
Evelyn’s father, David Dadisman, was known for his gardens. "People still remember his wonderful sweet corn," recalls Evelyn.
Evelyn, too, delights in her small garden where she grows vegetables and flowers, admitting she’s scaled it down quite a bit.
"Gardening keeps me in shape," she says.
In 1980, Evelyn and her husband, William David Evans, a former Boeing employee, moved from South Seattle back to Home where they built
their retirement dream house. She describes her land as, "up on a hill, forested on two sides, with a beautiful view of Mt. Rainier and
the water."
Evelyn is a member of the Council of Elders with The Mustard Seed Project, an organization dedicated to helping seniors remain in
the community as they age. So far, Evelyn hasn’t needed any special services, as her close-knit family surrounds her…like the Home
City of 1896.
What’s Being Done to Help Seniors "Age in Place"
At present, many elders in Home and all along the Key Peninsula are hoping to age in place, but with insufficient services available to
meet all of their needs, some have had to move.
Edie Morgan laments the fact that in her 27 years of living in Home, she’s seen too many residents unable to remain there through the end
of their lives. She dislikes the idea of the elders scattered miles away, breaking a supportive bond of relationships and friendships that
they’ve always known.
"The unique and interesting history of Home Colony provides a great illustration of why we are working on the issue of aging in place
here on the Key Peninsula," says Edie.
Edie Morgan is the Founder and Executive Director of The Mustard Seed Project, a nonprofit organization, whose mission is to support the
Key Peninsula community and provide services enabling seniors to remain in the community they love.
Edie and the Mustard Seed’s well-organized team of Board of Directors, Council of Elders and a Fiscal sponsor, have set forth major goals
for four community task groups.
First, there needs to be senior information and referral services including a directory of specific services. The project leaders have
gathered together a number of participating organizations such as Pierce County Aging and Long Term Care, Key Peninsula Health & Professional
Center, Angel Guild-Franciscan Volunteer Services and others. Local volunteers were trained and in August 2007 they opened a centralized
information resource, the Key Senior Information Center.
Second, seniors need transportation and mobility services and so a task force of transit and transportation services was formed. In
addition, local volunteer drivers were organized and now provide free transportation by private car for low-income seniors.
Third, Key Peninsula churches and community services along with Pierce County Aging and Long Term Care are exploring and expanding the
availability of wellness resources and caregiver services.
And fourth, the partner organizations are identifying existing housing options for the elderly and exploring development of affordable
assisted living. Some options being considered include adult family homes, co-housing, shared housing, boarding homes and home
maintenance programs.
The people today, who are attracted to the Key Peninsula and to Home, cherish the beauty, woods and the quiet. Many are retired and can
walk the trails and the miles of waterfront. They like the relaxed, live-and let-live attitude of the residents.
"It’s a wonderful place to live… unlike anywhere else on the globe," says Edie.
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