After graduation, Fred began work as a plasterer and bricklayer, and worked in the entire valley, from Ellensburg and Kittitas to Cle Elum, Easton and Roslyn. Fred married Georgia Kidder on October 5, 1925. He was 31 and she was 19. Their two sons, Kenneth and Clifford were both born in Ellensburg. In 1936, Fred was working at Hayward Camp by the Vantage Bridge. He did the masonry on the original restrooms at the Gingko petrified forest center. He was assigned more than six young boys from the Civilian Conversation Corps (CCC) to help him. He recalled that most had never seen a shovel.
During the war years (1943) Fred went to the coast to work in the shipyards, and the family moved to Puyallup, Washington, where they remained. He was a masonry bricklayer and member of the Masonry contractors of Pierce County, Bricklayers Local No. 1, and retired in 1980 at the age of 76. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Puyallup.
Fred had an infectious smile that was evident even at the age of ten in a home movie of the Stickney family camping out. Relatives viewing the vintage (probably 1914) home movie all declared that Uncle Fred 'looks the same!'
Fred was the last surviving child of Elmer and Maria Stickney. He passed away at the age of 85 and was buried in Puyallup.
After graduation, Fred began work as a plasterer and bricklayer, and worked in the entire valley, from Ellensburg and Kittitas to Cle Elum, Easton and Roslyn. Fred married Georgia Kidder on October 5, 1925. He was 31 and she was 19. Their two sons, Kenneth and Clifford were both born in Ellensburg. In 1936, Fred was working at Hayward Camp by the Vantage Bridge. He did the masonry on the original restrooms at the Gingko petrified forest center. He was assigned more than six young boys from the Civilian Conversation Corps (CCC) to help him. He recalled that most had never seen a shovel.
During the war years (1943) Fred went to the coast to work in the shipyards, and the family moved to Puyallup, Washington, where they remained. He was a masonry bricklayer and member of the Masonry contractors of Pierce County, Bricklayers Local No. 1, and retired in 1980 at the age of 76. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Puyallup.
Fred had an infectious smile that was evident even at the age of ten in a home movie of the Stickney family camping out. Relatives viewing the vintage (probably 1914) home movie all declared that Uncle Fred 'looks the same!'
Fred was the last surviving child of Elmer and Maria Stickney. He passed away at the age of 85 and was buried in Puyallup.
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