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June Burn was born
Inez Chandler Harris on June 19, 1893, in Anniston, Alabama. She was hired as a staff writer
for McCall’s Magazine in 1917, which sparked her interest in writing.
June met Farrar Burn (born September 22, 1888) while living in a cabin near
Washington, D.C., and the two were wed in 1919.

Because of their mutual love of nature and disregard for the
routines of a workaday world, the couple chose to try and find
their own island to homestead – a choice that led them across
the country to the San Juan Islands in the Puget Sound. They
were the last homesteaders in the San Juan Islands, settling on Sentinel Island, just west of the Spieden Channel.
It was here that their first son, North, was born. Their second
son, Bob (South) Burn was born 29 months later in a hospital
near the cabin where June and Farrar had first met.
In
1920 June and Farrar were granted teaching appointments from the
Bureau of Education in the Alaska School Service and assigned to
Gambell, St. Lawrence Island in Alaska. For a year they
lived and worked closely with the Eskimo population there.
When June became pregnant with North they came back to the San
Juans.
June and Farrar’s adventures took them across the country, and
brought them back to a farm on Waldron Island in the San Juans.
Prior to settling on Waldron, June and Farrar (and sons) lived
in Bellingham, Washington. Farrar built June Acres, two cabins
located in the woods surrounding what is now Fairhaven College
at Western Washington University. It was during this time that
June wrote a daily column for the Bellingham Herald
entitled “Puget Soundings,” detailing her own adventures in the
area as well as the countless stories of local residents.
The
popularity of her column prompted her to create her own weekly
newspaper, which was filled with “pictures of this scenic land
and with articles and stories by all the writers and leaders of
the Northwest.” The paper was
popular in Bellingham, but the small audience couldn't justify
the costs of the paper. Therefore June and Farrar moved the
publication to Seattle for a short time. In all, The Puget
Sounder lasted from 1935-1939.
In 1941 June published Living High:
An Unconventional Autobiography. Following the success of
her book, in 1946 June and Farrar bought a surplus Coast Guard
lifeboat and began their “100 Days in the San Juans,” traveling
around the islands and collecting stories of the islands and
their inhabitants that were printed as a column in the
Seattle P.I. The stories were collected together in 1983,
and published as a book by the same name.
Later
in their lives Farrar traveled the country lecturing on “How to
Be Happy, Anyway,” and June taught for a short while at the
University of Washington. Their adventures led them all
across the country, where they spent time living in New York, Washington D.C.,
California, Florida, and Arkansas.
In 1967, after deciding not to return
to Sentinel Island, June and Farrar moved to a small farm near
Fort Smith, Arkansas – Farrar’s home town. June died there in
1969, followed by Farrar in 1975.
References:
Living High:
An Unconventional Autobiography, by
June Burn 1992 (3rd edition)
100 Days in the
San Juans, by June Burn, 1946
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