| bratlie brothers profile
Bratlie Brothers
A big mill operated by
the Bratlie Brothers provided a major impetus for the Ridgefield
economy for more than a quarter of a century. One of the brothers,
John Louis Bratlie, also entered the banking business at Ridgefield
and Battle Ground.
John Bratlie, a native
of Minneapolis, Minn., left Skagit County for Alaska, where he built
a mill. He returned to Skagit County in the early 1900s, and was
in the mill business there. In 1913, seeking more lucrative fields,
Bratlie went into partnership with Walter McClelland in a shingle
mill in Ridgefield. His brother Hans, who had operated a newspaper
in Concrete, joined as John Bratlie's partner about 1916 at the
mill at Ridgefield.
The plant, valued at
$200,000, burned in the early 1920s but was rebuilt.
Nearly a hundred persons
worked there at the time.
A 1927 magazine article
reported that the Bratlies operated the largest exclusive cedar
lumber manufacturing facility in the Columbia River area. The electrically
operated plant provided bungalow siding and shingles.
John Bratlie specialized
in the mill machinery, and his brother had charge of outside activities,
including sales.
When the Ridgefield
State Bank closed in the 1930s, John Bratlie bought the business.
His daughter, Marjorie Ingels of Beaverton, Ore., said her father
purchased the bank "just to keep it open 0 he needed a place to
bank." Later he also purchased banks at Battle Ground and in Oregon.
Mrs. Ingels was a director of all the banks, and worked at the Ridgefield
bank.
Hans Bratlie died about
1942.
A fire in July 1943
destroyed six dry kilns and the planing mill plus stockpiles at
the Bratlie plant. John Bratlie, who was not in good health at the
time and spending winters in California, decided not to rebuild.
He also sold his interest in the banks.
Bratlie died in 1951.
The widow of Hans Bratlie,
Mary Belle Bratlie, known as Matie, (in 1989) still lives in Olympia.
She is 104!
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