Chicago Sun-Times

A FAMILY’S SORROW, ONE YEAR LATER

Almost one year ago, Patricia Frieson became the first person in Illinois to die of the coronaviru­s. It claimed her sister, Wanda Bailey, just nine days later. Today, their brother talks about how their family became ‘essentiall­y the first’ in the state t

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

On March 16, 2020, Patricia Frieson became Illinois’ first COVID-19 victim. Her sister Wanda Bailey would die from the virus just nine days later. Now, as their family gathers — masked and socially distanced — to remember them, their brother reflects on a painful year of the pandemic.

March 2 would have been the late Wanda Bailey’s 64th birthday. Bailey’s sister, the late Patricia Frieson, would have been 62 on Nov. 27, had the retired nurse not succumbed on March 16, 2020, to the novel coronaviru­s, a disease declared a global pandemic five days earlier.

Frieson, the sixth daughter in an African American family of nine siblings from Chicago’s Auburn-Gresham neighborho­od, became the first person to die of COVID-19 in Illinois.

The nation’s first known COVID death had occurred 5½ weeks earlier, in California.

Tragically, on March 25, just nine days after Frieson’s passing, her sister, Bailey, succumbed to a virus that by then had claimed 26 lives in Illinois — with COVID fatalities about to escalate nationwide at an astronomic­al rate. By the end of May, it had claimed 100,000 lives.

“I wish you never knew us,” said Frieson’s brother, Anthony Frieson, 58, of the South Side, with whom we’d spoken last year after the death of his first sister.

“At the same time, I hope the story you wrote concerning my family made others more aware to do the things they needed to do so that hopefully none of their family members got sick. I hope that it helped others follow protocol and helped them get through it,” he said recently, in an exclusive interview with the Chicago Sun-Times.

He chatted while preparing for a small family gathering planned that evening at the home of a niece — masked, of course, and socially distanced — both to celebrate Bailey’s birthday and to remember both sisters on this somber anniversar­y.

His remaining four sisters were there, Bailey’s husband and three or four nieces and nephews. All the women made a dish or dessert to go with the catering. A brother in Minnesota, and Bailey’s son in Texas, were missed. His other brother had passed in 1997, of a brain seizure. There was plenty of storytelli­ng.

“It was just a small gathering in remembranc­e. We all wore masks,” Anthony Frieson said.

“We tried to keep it happy. We were really glad Wanda’s husband came because it’s still heavy on him with her, and difficult, as it is for all of us. One more year and Wanda would have been retiring. She was looking forward to that.”

The family always celebrated Patricia Frieson’s birthday right after Thanksgivi­ng.

A year to the day the World Health Organizati­on declared a global pandemic, the U.S. leads in COVID fatalities, with 528,287 dead. That’s more deaths than in many developing countries. The next highest number of COVID deaths are in Brazil, 268,370; Mexico, 191,789; India, 125,222; and the United Kingdom, 100,811.

So about 1 in 670 Americans have died from COVID since the first death on Feb. 6, 2020.

Illinois has the seventh highest deaths nationwide, at 23,068. California leads in deaths, at 54,646; followed by New York, 48,500; Texas, 45,597; Florida, 31,889; Pennsylvan­ia, 24,425; New Jersey, 23,768; Georgia, 17,978; Ohio, 17,661; and Michigan, 16,692.

Nationwide, more than 29.1 million Americans have become infected. The next highest number of COVID cases are found in India, 11.3 million; Brazil, 11.1 million; Russia, 4.3 million; and the U.K., 4.2 million.

In the U.S., COVID took advantage of long accepted racial, social and economic dispari

“The worst part with this virus is that all sense of closure is gone. That’s what kept it in the forefront so much for me this past year. Every day, more people getting sick, dying. You’re seeing the numbers and wishing you could subtract two people.” ANTHONY FRIESON, brother of Patricia Frieson and Wanda Bailey, among the first people to die of COVID-19 in Illinois

ties affecting everything from health care and housing to education and employment — Frieson’s death an omen of the devastatio­n the virus would wreak on communitie­s of color nationwide.

“We were essentiall­y the first to encounter COVID’s whole new, traumatic set of circumstan­ces,” Anthony Frieson said.

“We ended up handling their remains through cremation. We had never done that before, and we still have not been able to hold memorial services due to ongoing travel restrictio­ns. A lot of family wanted to come. But we plan to do that still, as soon as things open up.”

His sister’s death highlighte­d the hospital isolation COVID would institute for the dying.

“As I had shared, this is your sister. And not being able to see them in the hospital was so different. It was horrible,” he said.

“You leave them alone, and you’re praying to God and hoping the hospital is doing the right thing. You know that they’re doing the best they can, but you also know that seeing all the family that loves her would make a difference too, to doctors and nurses caring for her.

“Ultimately, the worst part with this virus is that all sense of closure is gone,” he said.

“That’s what kept it in the forefront so much for me this past year. Every day, more people getting sick, dying. You’re seeing the numbers and wishing you could subtract two people.”

When we talked to him a year ago, he was awaiting results of his own COVID test.

Because his sister’s death was among the very first — coming when there was very little known about contagious­ness or prevention protocol — the whole family was quarantine­d, worried about all the hugs and kisses shared with their sisters at recent gatherings.

“I tested positive, with mild symptoms — chills, fatigue, loss of taste and smell,” he said.

“A couple of siblings believe they had it, because of similar symptoms, though they never got tested. Later last year, a niece also got it. But at least no one else was hospitaliz­ed.”

When the nation last month marked the inconceiva­ble milestone of half a million dead, President Joe Biden, in a White House ceremony, noted the yearlong pandemic has killed more Americans than died in World War I, World War II and the Vietnam War combined.

While the U.S. accounts for just 4.25% of the world’s population, it has suffered 20% of the world’s COVID deaths.

But there is some good news to report. Globally, 66.7 million people have recovered from COVID. And ramped up vaccine distributi­on has meant a dramatic drop in new infections and deaths from their January peak. Scientists say virus containmen­t is nearing.

So hope is on the horizon, even if heartbreak is yet to fade in the rearview mirror.

“The vaccines brought a lot of encouragem­ent,” Anthony Frieson said.

“But after losing two sisters, you’re enveloped in your own sadness. So many times in the past year, with each new treatment discovered, I thought, ‘If they had only been here a little longer.’ With people getting well, you wish it could have been better for your own family.

“But I know that God had His own plans, and His plans are perfect. I don’t know how anyone without a strong belief in God could get through such a thing,” Frieson’s brother said. “As sad and difficult as this has been, I don’t know where I’d be right now without that faith and family.”

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Sisters Patricia Frieson and Wanda Bailey
PROVIDED Sisters Patricia Frieson and Wanda Bailey
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 ?? PROVIDED PHOTOS ?? Sisters Patricia Frieson (left) and Wanda Bailey were among the first people in Illinois to die from COVID-19.
PROVIDED PHOTOS Sisters Patricia Frieson (left) and Wanda Bailey were among the first people in Illinois to die from COVID-19.
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