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In
the beginning, it had nothing to do with the footprint in the
sidewalk - very few people even knew it existed. In the end, this
tiny piece of Kalaupapa's history would be the centerpiece of
a celebration, and the little girl who's small feet were pressed
into the wet cement on Sept. 10, 1932 would be welcomed back home,
seventy years after leaving.
In
1925 Robert "Doc" Cooke of the wireless department for
the Mutual Telephone Company of Honolulu was sent to Kalaupapa
Leprosy Settlement, or "Leprosarium" to attempt to install
radio receivers that would enable the "leprosy" patients
of the Kalaupapa Settlement to hear radio. All previous attempts
had failed.
Often called "the loneliest place in the world", the
settlement was cut off from the rest of civilization, save for
the occasional supply ship and mail plane. Doc successfully installed
the receivers, and consequently won the respect of the patients
of Kalaupapa, who considered him a Kahuna of unusual power. So
when a successor was needed to replace the out-going Superintendent,
John D. McVeigh, Doc was suggested and agreed upon. He and his
young bride Wilhelmina moved into the Superintendent's house and
within a few years had two children: Edna Leslie Cooke ("Abbie")
and her little brother Allister Bennett Cooke ("Biffie").
Doc was born in Kentucky in 1887 and came to Hawaii while Chief
Electrician with the navy on the submarine the USS K-7. A quiet
and fair man, good at settling disputes and counseling those with
grievances, Doc was an avid reader and letter writer who learned
to speak Hawaiian fluently while at the settlement.
When electricity came to Kalaupapa, he refused to use his stove
until the patients had stoves as well. Wilhelmina was born in
Hawaii and had grown up with some of the locals who eventually
came to the settlement as patients, and so felt completely at
home in Kalaupapa. She started the Ladies' Social Club to raise
money for "talkie" movie shows and dances, and to teach
the women of the settlement to cook and sew. The patients loved
them both, and appreciated what they saw in their faces: kindness,
compassion, and no pity.
At
that time, the law required that when a patient gave birth her
baby had to be sent away after one year, either to be raised by
family or to be adopted. Wilhelmina would help to dress the babies
and take them down to the boat, sometimes eight or ten of them,
and see them safely to their next destination. As heart-wrenching
as it was, the women of Kalaupapa knew that she felt their pain:
she had given up her babies too.
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We
don't know if there was a formal directive, or if Doc and Wilhelmina
just decided their children would be better off away from Kalaupapa,
but in 1932, when Abbie was 4 and Biff 3, they were sent to live
with Wilhelmina's
parents at Kamakai, near Honolulu on the island of Oahu.
Wilhelmina would sail to Kamakai to visit the children every few
months, Doc less often, but it wasn't enough for the children,
especially Biffy, who was inconsolable for days after his mother
left. In 1939, due to Doc's failing health, an early retirement
and life pension of $200 a month was voted upon by the legislature.
But not long after, while Wilhelmina was visiting the children
on Oahu, Doc died of a heart attack in the Superintendent's Quarters.
He was mourned by all. To read more about Doc's story and time
at Kalaupapa, go to "Doc's Story".
Doc and Wilhelmina had begun building a house in Kalai, Molokai
that they had planned to move into with the children. When Doc
died, Wilhelmina turned it into a hotel and built a smaller house
to house her parents and the children. Then in 1945 she packed
up her children and headed for the mainland, settling in Santa
Barbara, California. There she delved into the business world
with real estate, stocks, and various business ventures. She remarried
in the late 1950's, but her new husband died tragically a few
years later. She died on February 14, 2000 at the age of 97. To
learn more about Wilhelmina and the gift of the Kalaupapa photo
album, go to "Wilhelmina's Gift".
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Biffie
(or "Biff" as he would ever after be known) grew into
a handsome man, and married his high school sweetheart Peggy.
He got a job with the Associated Telephone Co. (like father, like
son) and joined the National Guard. He was called to duty and
stationed at Camp Cooke (no relation) in California until he went
to fight in the Korean war in the winter of 1952. When he returned
from the war he went back to work for Associated Telephone, which
eventually became General Telephone Co. He and Peggy would have
a daughter, Coleene.
Abbie
(or "Leslie" as she now preferred to be called) grew
into a beautiful young woman, with Doc's large brown eyes and
dark hair. She studied commercial art at Woodbury College in Los
Angeles, worked for a while in various commercial art jobs, and
for a short time had her own business. One day, feeling listless
and bored, she saw an Air Force recruiting poster in a window
and went in to join up. At 5'5" and 110 pounds, she was told
she was too small. She spent a week trying to gain weight and
went back in. They told her she was still too small, but that
the Army would probably take her, and so in 1951 she joined the
Women's Army Corp.
One
day a WAC friend of hers told her about a young Staff Sergeant
named Gene Mayer who was looking for someone to give him dance
lessons so he could take his girlfriend out dancing. Leslie loved
dancing and was very good at it, so she met with him. They were
married on May 31st of 1952, six weeks after their first date.
In 1955 they were living in an apartment in White Plains, NY when
Leslie gave birth to their first daughter, Jean Marie (me). Leslie
Ann and Andrea Lynn would soon follow. Gene didn't want his family
to live the "Army life" - moving every year or so, and
so he accepted a permanent post at Vandenberg Air Force Base (formerly
Camp Cooke) in Lompoc, California where our family would stay
until all the chicks left the nest.
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Leslie
became a successful local artist, best known for her brown-toned
paintings of local historical buildings and barns, and from time
to time she would substitute teach at our local school, Los Berros
Elementary school. She was always up to something: President of
the Art Association, Vice President of the Community Council,
etc. "THINK BIG" was her motto. I spent a lot of time
in my early years trying to tell her how to be a "normal"
Mom (I was a big "Donna Reed" fan): wear aprons, bake
cookies, stay at home...but she just couldn't get the hang of
it.
Then
when I was in the 6th grade, the class next to mine was going
on a field trip to Sacramento to meet our Representative. They
would also be visiting San Francisco, which I had read about but
never seen. They would take two students from other classes along
with them: the two who could earn the most money. I really
wanted to go. My THINK BIG mother made hundreds
of candied apples and sold them at the snack stand at lunchtime.
I went north to Sacramento, and my lectures about "normal"
Moms went south.
Gene
left the army at Vandenberg AFB in 1980 to start his own business
repairing cameras and, after all their girls left home, he and
Leslie moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico where Leslie dove into the
art scene and Gene operated L&N Photographic Repair for ten
years. They moved to Arkansas in 1993, but to this day, if a photographer
in Santa Fe learns that I'm his daughter, they will go on and
on about what a wonderful man he is, and will I please "say
hello" for them. He is often told he looks like Sean Connery
and indeed, with his gray beard and ponytail he looks like he
stepped out of "The Medicine Man".
Several years ago Leslie noticed that her vision was becoming
blocked by a black spot in the middle of her line of sight. It
was the beginning of Macular
Degeneration. Soon she only had peripheral vision, and eventually
she lost the sight in her left eye completely. She had told me
she wanted to see Kalaupapa "one more time before I die",
and I desperately wanted to make that happen, but for years my
attempts to make a connection on Molokai had proved futile. As
her vision worsened, my husband and I decided to just go ahead
and buy the tickets, figuring we would somehow find a way to make
it happen once we got there. At least we could take the Father
Damien Tour and see the main sites of Kalaupapa as tourists.
When
I told my parents about the trip we were planning to give them
as a Christmas gift, Leslie was overjoyed, and details about her
days at the settlement started coming back to her. She remembered
the day she and Biffie had their feet pressed into the sidewalk
out front of her childhood home, the Superintendent's Quarters.
She said she hoped they were still there and that we could see
them. She remembered a little stretch of beach where her father
swam with her on his back, and trips up the Pali on horseback.
Somehow, we just had to make this happen.
In
August of 2002, after determining to throw caution to the wind
and go ahead and make the trip in January, I put the first pages
of this web site up in a last-ditch hope that someone who could
help me make a contact on Molokai would find it. A few months
later, the help I was looking for arrived in the form of a sunny
blonde with a big smile and an even bigger heart.
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