04/25/2026
Great story.
In the winter of 1910, the forests of Coos County, Oregon, went quiet in a way no one expected.
When the logging camp shut down during a bitter labor dispute, workers were turned out of their company-owned bunks with nothing but the clothes on their backs and wages that would never come. Oskar, a 36-year-old Swedish immigrant who had crossed an ocean chasing the promise of steady work in the great Douglas fir forests, suddenly had no camp, no paycheck, and no plan. Beside him stood his wife Britta — 33, practical, and completely undefeated by the situation — and their four children, all watching their father's face for a sign of what came next.
What came next was a tree.
Deep in the old growth, they found it — a fire-scarred Douglas fir nearly twelve feet wide at its base, its interior hollowed out by some long-ago blaze into a dark, dry chamber just large enough for a family that had no other options. Oskar stretched a canvas sheet across the opening. Britta, without complaint and without fanfare, fashioned a small stove out of salvaged rail spikes. The children gathered wood. And the family moved in.
Seven months they lived there, through the dripping Pacific winter and into the first warmth of spring. Every morning, the four children rose, dressed, and walked three miles through the forest to the schoolhouse — three miles back in the afternoon. The local community came to know them gently as "the tree kids," a name the children wore with more pride than embarrassment. Their classroom peers, who had roofs and walls, never quite forgot the children who didn't need them.
Oskar and Britta scraped together income the only way the forest would allow — gathering pine cones, doing odd work, stretching every coin. Slowly, impossibly, savings accumulated. When spring turned to summer and summer turned to enough, they walked out of the tree and into a land office, where they purchased two acres of their own ground.
Years later, when someone finally asked Britta what it had been like, she didn't pause.
"The company took our house," she said. "But the tree gave us one — and for that, we were grateful."
There are people who survive hardship. And then there are people who look hardship in the eye, hang a canvas door on it, and make it home.