My great aunt Florence, the second child of Henry R. Bowen and Barbara Naumoff, was born 1 April 1883 in Kodiak, Alaska. She was an April Fools baby, so there must have been a lot of jokes played on her while she grew up.
She died 24 March 1946 in Seattle, Washington.
From the census records we found that she had married a man named Pettlin while living in Wood Island. She had a son Herman Pettlin who was born 20 October 1900. Herman died 22 January 1902 in Kodiak.
Florence’s second marriage was to Charles R. Olssen. (His name was changed from Olsen but his son Bill can’t remember when.) Charles Olssen came from Sweden in 1892, age 21.
Charles’s aunt owned a trading post at Kennecot. When her husband died she called for Charles to take over the business. Later he discovered oil near Cordova and put in an oil well with a few barrels a day coming from it. He also raised foxes on Fox Island. He dried fish with Keller and sold it for dog food. Later he built dories and powerboats, the Waldo and the Ralph were two of them. He took my great Aunt Barbara and Great Uncle Fred to the island with him to help with the foxes, when they were young.
Florence and Charles had 10 children but only 5 lived.
William (Bill) married Alice K. Moore (who was also blind, born 5 March 1912, died 13 May 1978). They had no children.
Charles carved the name Barbara in a huge wooden bed that belonged to Florence’s mother Barbara. I remember sleeping in her bed, the mattress was so soft and with the heavy quilts you really sunk in. Bill says that once when he was sleeping in her bed, his cat peed on the bed so he climbed under the mattress and with the heavy quilts almost smothered.
Florence was a midwife and delivered almost 400 babies in Seldovia. She learned to deliver babies about age 12, helping a local doctor. She delivered all of my mothers babies except my older brother Thomas, who was born in Anchorage.
Florence met her husband Charles when he went to Kodiak. They wrote letters to each other for a while, then got married. When she first came to Seldovia, she and her husband ran a boarding house near the boardwalk. I remember it as John Roe’s house, which was below our log house and near Captain Fillmore’s Hill. They grew a huge garden furnishing the family with vegetables.
Florence’s third marriage was to Charles Hammelbacher, who was born about 1877 in Germany, and who died 14 January 1930. They had no children.
When I was a child Florence lived in a big white house at the end of the Russian graveyard on the waterfront. To get to her house we had to walk a block of sidewalk, on one side the graveyard and the other the bay. At night this was scary and we always scared friends and ourselves with our imagination.
Florence was a big women and very strict. She gave us all our birthday parties at her house.
Dr. Kirby lived in a small house on the other end of the graveyard toward town and all his sick people went to her house to recover, as we had no hospital then and his house and doctor office was too small to take care of them.
Great Aunt Florence had a beautiful garden of strawberries and a pantry full of cookie jars.
Her son Bill went blind. When coming home from school, he ran into a flywheel at the side of the road. He was sent to school in Portland.
She along with her sister Barbara and a few neighbors were always making quilts. They were quilts that were made to be used. She made her babies that she delivered quilts also. My brother said that he remembered working on them when he would go to visit her. (She is in the quilt book, Quilts of Alaska: A Textile Album of the Last Frontier by June E. Hall, published in Juneau 2001 by the Gastineau Channel Historical Society of Juneau, Alaska).
Florence and her sister Barbara were very superstitious women and would scare me with their spooky stories. They always seemed to know when someone was going to die, even telling me (or listening to them talking) who that person would be. If anyone drowned in our town, none of us children were to go near the water until they heard that there was three that died. If a bird hit a window of a boat or house, that was another omen. It still bothers me when a bird hits our window.
When my mother and dad had problems, usually it was drinking and guns, we always got hold of her, and as soon as dad saw Aunt Florence coming up the walk he calmed down.
When Florence moved to Seattle her sister Barbara Bowen Wick moved into her home in Seldovia.
Florence died in Seattle on 24 March 1946.
Herding reindeer from the skies, and flying with mail and supplies to the Arctic Circle for the Loman Reindeer Corporation, are some of the jobs of Victor Ross, whose wife, Mrs. Agnes Olssen Ross, is a guest at the Seldovia home of her mother, Mrs. Chaz. Hammelbacher.
Mrs. Ross was a recent arrival in Seldovia on the “Princess Pat,” after an airplane flight from Nome to Fairbanks, thence by rail to Anchorage. She spoke of a fine trip all the way, the weather during the flight being particularly fine.
The aerial journey was made in five hours, which included two stops at Kaltak and at Ruby. Ordinarily the flight is timed as from four to four and one-half hours, while the old style land route required four weeks, Mrs. Ross explained.
Mrs. Ross stated that her husband is employed a good portion of the time by the Loman Reindeer Corporation in checking up on their vast reindeer herds, his particular job in this connection being to report the distances they have traveled in their trek toward Canada, that being one of the main markets for the stock.
Preparatory to receiving his flying license, Victor Ross, who is now associated with the Northern Air Transport Corporation, became identified with the late ill-fated Carl Ben Nielson, his required 200 hours of flying being devoted to delivering oil to the noted flyer.
Mrs. Hamelbacher left out on the M. S. “Discoverer” on the 30th for Anchorage, being called away on business. Her daughter will join her there, and after a brief visit in the Inlet City will return to her home in Nome.