Cordova and the interior In December 1915 after living in Winslow for three years, Meusebach–Zesch visited her sister and brother-in-law in the
Territory of Alaska, with the intent of returning to her practice in Arizona. The
Second Organic Act of 1912 had created the Territory of Alaska out of land the
United States had purchased from
Russia in 1867. Meusebach–Zesch spent that Christmas with her sister and brother-in-law in
Cordova, Alaska. In February 1916, she substituted for vacationing Cordova dentist C. W. Hale. She began to realize that Alaska's need for dentists could be a lucrative career decision. Meusebach–Zesch wanted to see Alaska's interior while mulling over her professional future. She arranged with the
Alaska Commercial Company to carry her as a passenger on its mail delivery. She began aboard a freight train in Cordova. The mode of transportation and drivers changed several times with the weather and circumstances. Through
Chitina,
Copper Center, Delta,
Gulkana,
Paxson,
Donnelly and
McCarthy, she rode by horseback, on wagons, forded through ice at the
Tanana River, and was taken through the
Salcha River in a native hewn craft. On dog sleds, she was strapped in for stability, and once rolled down a hill when the sled detached. They stopped at numerous roadhouses, which in Alaska served the same purpose as an inn or stagecoach stop in other states. They provided food, shelter and basic necessities. One of the roadhouses was at Richardson, 70 miles southeast of Fairbanks. Named for
Wilds P. Richardson, the community had a population of a few hundred people, and the roadhouse was run by Fred Wilkins. Twenty-four days after the trip began in Cordova, they arrived in
Fairbanks. After visiting a gold mine near Fairbanks, she completed her trip with a boat ride along the
Yukon River and explored the
Yukon Territory. At the trip's end, Meusebach–Zesch had decided to move to Alaska.
Sabbatical and move to Anchorage She took temporary leave from Alaska to do post-graduate work at
Northwestern University in Chicago in 1918, and survived an
influenza bout while in San Francisco. The global
1918 flu pandemic killed an estimated 30–50 million. The pandemic spread to Alaska in the fall of 1918, and lasted until the spring of 1919. Hoping to stem the spread, Governor
Thomas Riggs, Jr. imposed a maritime quarantine on the territory. The
Inuit population was hard hit, partially due to preferring traditional medicines, and partially from fear of western hospitals. In some cases, entire communities were decimated. Dr. Hale in Cordova died as a result of the pandemic, and Meusebach–Zesch purchased his equipment for her office. When copper mining began to decline in Cordova, she moved her practice to
Anchorage where she also began to work with the local
PTA to improve dental care for children. In 1923, she closed her Anchorage practice to study at
Columbia University in New York through the end of 1924. Following her university studies, Meusebach–Zesch vacationed in Europe and Egypt before returning to Alaska.
Nome, remote Inuit villages, near-death experiences Meusebach–Zesch's goal in 1925 was to mine for gold in
Nome. She had a legal agreement with the existing claims owner to mine his claim in exchange for paying $500 for assessment, and $20,000 in royalties. She hired a Mr. Johnson to do the actual mining for her. No gold was found, and the owner of the claims sued her. She believed Mr. Johnson had been working a scheme with the owner. Her only other means of income was to open a dental practice in Nome. She began conducting mobile dental clinics as she had in Arizona, and was put in charge of dental care for children in Inuit villages. She had a custom 16-foot sled built and hired Mr. Johnson, of the failed mining venture, as dog musher. She felt his labor would help repay what she lost in the lawsuit. Their route took them through Cape Nome, Solomon, Bluffs, White Mountain School, Moses, Dime Creek, and
Candle, each village giving her a welcoming all-night party. Meusebach–Zesch stayed in
Kotzebue for a month. At
Noorvik they stayed overnight with an Inuit family in a
barabara, a semisubterranean sod housing.
Kiana was the final clinic. Returning, they witnessed the
aurora borealis at Kotzebue, and spent the night at a barabara built inside a snow bank. Half the dog team fell through the ice near Cape Douglas, and Johnson advised leaving them to drown. Meusebach–Zesch crawled flat on her abdomen across the thin ice herself to save the dogs. Meusebach–Zesch serviced Inuit on
Little Diomede Island,
Saint Lawrence Island,
King Island,
Cape Prince of Wales. Chartering a plane to
Point Barrow in 1929, she survived a crash and walked partway to Kotzebue before being transported by an Inuk whose water craft was pulled along by his dogs on the beach. In March 1928, Meusebach–Zesch and her assistant Mrs. Cheney scheduled dental clinics at the White Mountain School for Inuit children, Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Mission at Pilgrim Hot Springs, and in
Council. Because of the lateness of the season and expected break-up of ice and snow, Meusebach–Zesch had trouble finding dogs for the sled, and was unable to hire a man to mush the dogs. She and Mrs. Cheney set off alone with a dog team. Between Cape Nome and Solomon Roadhouse, a blizzard left Meusebach–Zesch
snow blind and bedridden for a week. After they completed all scheduled work, they were advised against traveling back to Nome in the inclement conditions. Dire predictions turned to reality when they found themselves stranded, an estimated 30 miles from Nome. The dogs had given up, and they were not even able to make it to the nearest roadhouse. Meusebach–Zesch had begun to believe they might die.
Leonhard Seppala, known for winning multiple-year dog sled races, and for participating in the
1925 serum run to Nome, had been alerted about the women's hazardous trek. He hired a caterpillar tractor to search for them, rescuing the women on March 31, 1928. ==California 1930–1944==