Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lost Alaskans

Volunteers uncover fate of thousands sent to Oregon mental hospital a century ago

- MARK THIESSEN

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Lucy Pitka McCormick’s relatives cooked salmon, moose, beaver and muskrat over an earthen firepit on the banks of the Chena River, just outside Fairbanks, as they honored her life. They whipped whitefish, blueberrie­s and lard into a traditiona­l Alaska Native dessert, and dolloped servings onto a paper plate, setting it in the flames to feed her spirit.

The family prayed as McCormick’s great-grandson built a small plywood coffin that was filled with gifts and necessitie­s for the next world, such as her granddaugh­ter’s artwork and a hairbrush.

The weeklong Koyukon Athabascan burial ceremony in September was traditiona­l in all ways but one: McCormick died in 1931. Her remains were only recently identified and returned to family.

McCormick was one of about 5,500 Alaskans between 1904 and the 1960s who were committed to a hospital in Portland, Ore., after being deemed by a jury “really and truly insane,” a criminal offense.

There were no facilities to treat those with mental illness or developmen­tal disabiliti­es in what was then the Alaska territory, so they were sent — often by dog sled, sleigh or stagecoach — to a waiting ship in Valdez. The 2,500-mile journey ended at Morningsid­e Hospital.

Many never left, and their families never learned their fate.

They are known as the Lost Alaskans.

For more than 15 years, volunteers in Fairbanks and in Portland have been working to identify the people who were committed to the hospital. Many were buried in Portland cemeteries, some in unmarked pauper graves. A few, like McCormick, have been returned to Alaska for proper burials.

“It was pretty powerful that we had Lucy back,” said her grandson, Wally Carlo. “You could feel the energy when she came back to Alaska, like she had to wait 90-some years for this.”

A new database went online in February to help families see if their long-lost auntie or great-grandfathe­r were among those sent to Morningsid­e. The website, which builds on an earlier blog, is a clearingho­use for research performed by the volunteers.

Finding informatio­n has been laborious. Most records at the private hospital were lost in a 1968 fire, and territoria­l officials didn’t document those who were committed.

The volunteers became history detectives in an investigat­ion that has spanned more than 15 years. Among them: former Alaska health commission­er Karen Perdue; two retired state judges, Niesje Steinkruge­r and the late Meg Green; and two other Fairbanks residents, Ellen Ganley and Robin Renfroe, aided by Eric Cordingley, a cemetery volunteer in Portland.

They combed through dusty Department of Interior records at the National Archives,

the Alaska and Oregon state archives, and old Alaska court records for any tidbit: the results of commitment trials, cemetery files, death certificat­es, old newspaper stories and U.S. marshals reimbursem­ent records for the costs of escorting patients.

Ganley and Perdue started the search at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland, in 2008. Armed with laptops and a scanner, they gave themselves a week to find any reference to Perdue’s uncle, Gilford Kriska, who had disappeare­d from the village of Nulato, on the Yukon River in western Alaska, when he was a boy.

They found a wealth of informatio­n about others in Morningsid­e’s payment requests for housing Alaskans. Finally, they saw her uncle’s name on a patient trust account, showing the federal government owed him a few cents.

That entry provided his patient number, which they used to uncover more about Kriska, including that it was village nuns who had him committed.

Kriska eventually returned to Fairbanks, where Perdue said she met him once in the 1970s.

“He was mildly what we would call developmen­tally disabled today,” she said. He could read and write but had few life skills.

Perdue said that while she was health commission­er, from 1994 to 2001, many people approached her with similar stories of long-missing relatives. That pain had been passed down in the families for decades — “intergener­ational trauma,” Perdue said.

There are several thousand names in the new database, with more names and details being added. Users might be able to find when and why a patient was committed, when they left or died, a burial location, and a death certificat­e.

The hospital was founded in the late 19th century by Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, initially in his home and later on a bucolic farm in Portland. It operated under several names before it was called Morningsid­e.

In 1904 it received a government contract to care for mentally ill Alaskans, a contract that lasted until after Alaska gained statehood in 1959 and began to build its own mental health facilities.

A variety of Alaskans wound up there: miners, housewives, Alaska Natives, a co-founder of Juneau, a banker from Fairbanks. Causes included postpartum depression, cabin fever, epilepsy, addiction and syphilis. The youngest patient was 6 weeks old; the oldest was 96.

Parents sometimes would frighten their children into behaving by mentioning the hospital. “Inside, outside, Morningsid­e,” became a common phrase denoting people could stay in Alaska, move away or be committed.

It was likely letters written by the patients were never sent, and they never received mail meant for them, according to evidence found by retired judge Steinkruge­r.

Morningsid­e’s treatment of its residents came under public scrutiny by the 1950s. Congressio­nal hearings and public outrage eventually helped force its closure in 1968. A shuttered mall off Interstate 205 now sits on its former grounds.

From Portland, Cordingley documented burial sites at several cemeteries and obtained 1,200 Oregon death certificat­es.

“I’m just glad that I happened to be here when they needed someone to help,” said Cordingley, who has volunteere­d at his neighborho­od cemetery for about 15 years, helping to clean headstones and decipher obscure burial records.

In 2012, he began creating his own databases to help families find lost loved ones. He built three virtual cemeteries at www.findagrave.com, including photos of death certificat­es, burial sites and in some cases the patients. One virtual site is dedicated to Alaska Natives who died at Morningsid­e, a second to other patients and a third for Alaska children who died at another Oregon institutio­n, Baby Louise Haven.

Cordingley found Lucy McCormick’s grave marker in Portland, informed the family — they were stunned — and later watched as she was disinterre­d.

McCormick’s aunt, Fairbanks furrier Helen Callahan, claimed she was “insane,” and McCormick was admitted to Morningsid­e April 5, 1930, after a jury confirmed Callahan’s diagnosis, records show.

In January 1931, doctors performed a hysterecto­my. McCormick died within weeks from a post-surgery infection.

Wally Carlo said his father and uncles never talked about McCormick, and he never knew what happened to her. After Cordingley found her grave, the family decided to bring her home, Carlo said.

On a beautiful fall day, relatives launched four boats on the Yukon River to take her to her birthplace in the village of Rampart. They were escorted by eagles and swans, “like a salute to Grandma Lucy,” he said. She was laid to rest on a hill overlookin­g the village of 29 people and the river.

“Don’t ever give up hope and try to get them back to where they belong,” he said. “Their spirits don’t rest until they’re found and brought back home.”

 ?? ??
 ?? (Wally Carlo via AP) ?? Kathleen Carlo, left, the granddaugh­ter of Lucy Pitka McCormick and McCormick’s great-great-grandchild­ren Lucia, center, and Addison Carlo place candles and stones on her grave during a reburial ceremony in Rampart, Alaska. McCormick was one of the Lost Alaskans sent to a mental hospital in the 1930s. Her grave was recently discovered, and family members brought her back to Alaska for a proper burial.
(Wally Carlo via AP) Kathleen Carlo, left, the granddaugh­ter of Lucy Pitka McCormick and McCormick’s great-great-grandchild­ren Lucia, center, and Addison Carlo place candles and stones on her grave during a reburial ceremony in Rampart, Alaska. McCormick was one of the Lost Alaskans sent to a mental hospital in the 1930s. Her grave was recently discovered, and family members brought her back to Alaska for a proper burial.
 ?? (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) ?? Cordingley looks at his records (above photo) while searching for the graves of those who died at Morningsid­e Hospital at Multnomah Park Cemetery. (Top photo) Headstones, some belonging to those who died at Morningsid­e Hospital, are seen in Multnomah Park Cemetery in Portland, Ore.
(AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Cordingley looks at his records (above photo) while searching for the graves of those who died at Morningsid­e Hospital at Multnomah Park Cemetery. (Top photo) Headstones, some belonging to those who died at Morningsid­e Hospital, are seen in Multnomah Park Cemetery in Portland, Ore.
 ?? (Alaska State Library, Historical Collection­s via AP) ?? This undated image shows the beds at Morningsid­e Hospital in Portland. Volunteers have spent years digging through old records to identify about 5,500 Alaskans who were committed to a mental hospital in Oregon before Alaska gained statehood.
(Alaska State Library, Historical Collection­s via AP) This undated image shows the beds at Morningsid­e Hospital in Portland. Volunteers have spent years digging through old records to identify about 5,500 Alaskans who were committed to a mental hospital in Oregon before Alaska gained statehood.
 ?? (Alaska State Library, Historical Collection­s via AP) ?? This undated image shows Alaska Natives among strawberri­es at Morningsid­e Hospital in Portland.
(Alaska State Library, Historical Collection­s via AP) This undated image shows Alaska Natives among strawberri­es at Morningsid­e Hospital in Portland.
 ?? (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) ?? Eric Cordingley visits Multnomah Park Cemetery on March 13 in Portland, Ore. Cordingley has volunteere­d at his neighborho­od cemetery for about 15 years. He’s done everything from cleaning headstones to trying to decipher obscure burial records. He has documented Portland burial sites — Multnomah Park and Greenwood Hills cemeteries have the most Lost Alaskans — and obtained about 1,200 death certificat­es.
(AP Photo/Jenny Kane) Eric Cordingley visits Multnomah Park Cemetery on March 13 in Portland, Ore. Cordingley has volunteere­d at his neighborho­od cemetery for about 15 years. He’s done everything from cleaning headstones to trying to decipher obscure burial records. He has documented Portland burial sites — Multnomah Park and Greenwood Hills cemeteries have the most Lost Alaskans — and obtained about 1,200 death certificat­es.

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