Warren Adlooat 1883-1918
WARREN ADLOOAT
(pronounced
AD-LOO-AT)
Cape Prince
of Wales, Alaska
Warren Adlooat
1883-1918
Warren Ad-loo-at was a Kingikmiut Eskimo from Kin-ge-gan Village
(Cape Prince of Wales), which is on the Seward Peninsula, northwest of
Nome. He was educated at the Jesse Lee Children's Home in Unalaska and
worked as an interpreter on many occasions. The following (uncorrected story)
was written by Warren himself, I've changed nothing:
~~~
"As I was instructed to write and tell about
my life, I may tell it so now. I will try and tell just as nearest
and truly as I can remember. It is impossible to tell it in any
otherwise if you know how to tell it yourself. I am typing this on my typewriter
that I bot in Nome.
My name is Ad-loo-at, and I was born at Kin-ge-gan (Cape Prince
of Wales) in some part of the month of December 1883 or 1884. When I
began to know and wake up like, I lived with my Uncle. When I was little
boy, white man came to our place and tell us there was a God in heaven
and if we call to him he will hear us. After that nobody come to tell
us about God for a long time.
One time, my mother and father, brother, sister and me went to Siberia
trading in skin canoe. On way back, big storm came up and we think we
drown. Everybody was scared and were crying but I sit in the middle of
the boat and am crying also, but suddenly I remember the words of that
man, there is God in heaven and if you call he will hear you. I am poor
eskimo boy - I cannot speak english - I cannot pray, but something insides
of me says look up and so I looked up to those black clouds and quick as
anything, all the fraid went out of my heart and I am very happy. For many
hours we struggled with the wind and waves and reached the land. My people
think they are very lucky but I thinks that God has saved me.
Two weeks, three weeks, long time and that same joy and peace still
in my heart and then I know God speaks to me in that boat. I use tobacco
from little boy. After God speaks to me in boat, you thinks I stop to
use tobacco, I guess not. I likes God, I likes tobacco, I likes them both.
No teacher had come to my place to teach us but one day, walking along the
beach, the same voice speaks to me that speaks to me in the boat and says
"What for you use that stuff?" I know what he means and I says, I don't know.
I walks away and the voice speaks to me again and he says "What good is that
stuff anyway?". I thinks and says, no good I guess. I walks on more far
and the voice speaks to me third time and says "Why don't you quit?"----and
I quit.
I must tell you how many people lived in my Uncles in-nie or house.
My Uncle had two wives, their children were seven, my cousin, my grandmother,
my half brother, my mother Wey-ak-k-new and myself. Only one man took
cared of them. Nearly all of us were trying to help all we could. Some
of the children need to get drifted wood, some of them helped in the home,
some of them get water. I used to hunt and fish with the older cousins part
of the time.
My Uncle was hunting sea animals all the time. He was a great hunter
of all kinds of games. I was told it was just a while before I was born
that he caught two bull head whales, two wild deer, two or three polar bears
and great many common seals and oo-grook (big seals). You see that was
a great catch for one year. It would take other men three or four years
before they get one. But my Uncle was good and intelligence land animal
hunter. He know just what time the animals would come around and also
he knew just exactly when to hunt them. One time he came home with a large
oo-grook all alone, you know it takes several men to haul one of those
big oo-grook, they are probably 8 or 9 feet long and at least 2 foot broad.
One time he came home with six common seals so we called these seals nek-sok.
Oh my (ah-non-ka) but he was a generous man as I ever saw in my life.
Some time we had not enough to eat when spring come. In month of
April and May these are the hardest months. Some time he caught a common
seal and when some one saw him hauling a seal, great many old women would
come and took almost every bit of that seal away, sometimes nothing left
but the head and the gats. I should think there would be 30 or 40 women
come. I will never forget my Uncle. His name was Ket-me-sook but I am sorry
to say that he died by shot himself by accident with a shot gun. He
became an old man, still he was a good hunter, he was hunting ducks that
time when he shot himself. It was in the month of Oct. 24, 1914 and he
died in November.
Before we get this white food, we used to live on all kind of meat-on
fish, all kind of ducks, clams, black bead berries, green leaves and
certain kind of roots - this was in summer time. In winter time, seal
meat, oo-grook meat, polar bears meat and stowed up berries. In spring
time the same thing excepting and besides we gets these ducks, geese,
cranes, big and small crab too. I used to like to hunt them.
Sometimes I would be out all day fishing tom cods with a hook. I
used to hunt the flounders too. I would make a hole through the ice with
a toock and an ice scoop, make the hole looks like the track of a man, only
larger. Then I would lay down beside the hole on my side, just like I was
going to bed and then look down into the hole where I would see tom cods
and flounders come along from all directions and then I would speared
them.
Ah-men-ka, some time I would be very cold, I would be shivering.
I never had clothes enough. My father left my mother when I was probably
two or three weeks old and I never had a brother of my own. My father never
gave me any food or clothes either. I used to make queer plans that how
I would treat my father when I grew to be a man, but instead of treating
him bad, I tried to treated him best I could. I used to feel that I wanted
to revenge but the Holy Bible tells us, Vengeance is mine, I will repay
Thee. So I always try to remember that when difficulties come.
My mother was married three times. Last man was pretty good hunter.
It may be I was six or seven years old. This man helped me very much
and he lived with my mother till he died. Sometimes he would come home
with 4 or 5 seals. He caught 3 whales while I lived with him.
I used to go when he go hunting walrus in the spring. He was great
for story teller, but now I forgotten pretty nearly all of them. My step
father was an old timer I-pa-ney man, but he was pretty good and smart
all the same. That was in his canoe hunting. He caught these three whales
with I-pa-ney outfit. He was not believing in these white mens outfit
of shoulder guns, spears and bombs.
One time he was out hunting seals and we come to a big crack in
the ice, probably it was 2 miles to the ends. I left them on walk, when
I got to the middle of the ice, I found a big oo-grook laying on the ice
by his hole and then I crept on the ice silently to him and when I got
close enough, I shot him but I did not kill him dead. He went down under
the water and there I found him suffering and dying from his wounds. I
shot him again on the head and that time killed him. Before I shot him I
was pitying him because he was suffering so much. I didn't have any rope
with me and so I took off my belt and tied his lips to hold on with. Then
I began to called but no answer came. Then I called still more louder and
at last there came a man named Ah-pos-uk and another man named Ta-touk and
another man named Ig-hun-ga. I was very glad they came and help me. Then
we dragged it to the canoe where we could put it in and take it home. Dont
you know that in olden time the young man only got the head. They were glad
to get the skin and they divided the oo-grook up into several parts for their
shares. You dont know how much I was glad and proud of it when I came home
that day because that was the first one I killed.
I must tell you about the friends who come to help us, this was
in 1900. I was just big enough to walk about the village and saw them
bringing long things, that must be lumber and made big piles of them.
Then afterwards I saw them way up in the air -- that must be them build
the house and set up frame work. I thought that was great work when they
finished that house. They called it La-la-ka-yoke-tut-han.
They put up the se-le-ya-kie, that must be they called the school
and put up the seal skin banner. The first English word I learned was
harpoon, snow and ah-kra stove. I never forget those kind faces, I can
seem to look at them now. These were To-mo-rok and At-es-uk, those were
meant Mr. Lopp and and Mr. Thornton. I want to tell you reader that those
men had very hard time. Lots of trouble.
They the ones, first white men to live in this place. Lot of drunkards,
lot of quarrels in village then. Some people killed each other just be
revenging each other. So me, time when we were in school room, bad drunkards
come in, just break through door. One time an old drunkard women was kicking
the door and pounding it with a big stick because they wont let her in.
My dear reader, think you would stay another year if folks treat you like
that? I guess not. I think you would be anxious for summer to come so that
you would get out of it and leave that miserable place Kin-ge-gan. You think
they left that summer? I guess not. I think they anxious for us to learn
fast as we can to learn . I know they staid another year and another nearest
as I could remember.
Dont you know when you are young a year seems a very long time,
so it was with me that time. The good SS Bear brot them. The kind looking
faces I could remembered them. We called them na-loo-wok-mo-ut-ok-nod which
was meant white ladies. That na-loo-wok-mo-ut meant, those who lived in
white tanned seal skin because they are white like a white tanned seal
skin. I can remembered now how those ladies use to teach us how to read
and write. These were Mrs. Lopp and Mrs. Thornton. Another thing they taught
us about was God and His only Son Jesus.
One time, my step father caught a whale. Dont you know the old custom
when they caught a whale they never do anything. They claim when any
one does anything, he would probably affect himself from making or sewing,
maybe he would get sick or die. So that time I want to see whether it be
true if a harm will come to any one who does a thing. My parka was torn
on the side and I thought to myself, I will see if it is true and I sowed
my parka right before them all. Of course they were excited and told me
to stop sewing if I don't want to get sick, but I kept right on, only I
turned toward them and smiled. Of course it was not nice for me to acted
that way but I wanted to see whether it was true. My step father was very
mad to me and scolded me but I was just smiling again at him and that made
him more mad. Probably he thought I laughed at him. And my mother told me
I better stop if I did not want to get sick and die. I said to her, "Mother
I was to try if this was true I will be sick by morning. That night I was
not sick at all and that was only a story they tells, then I said to my mother,
"Mother didn't you see me sick this morning?" "You might get sick some time"
she said, but I was never get sick on that account.
I used to like to visit Mr. Lopp and I would stay for hours because
it was just a place I like to stay. Sometimes it would be midnight before
I would come home and they would simply tell me kindly, "I think you had
better go now for it is time for you to be home because your mother will
be worrying about you." They would tell me in eskimo and I used to keep
thinking, I hope they will not tell me to go home, Ah-non-ka I used to
like to stay at their house just because I like it very much. When they
lived in that old school house, I used to come around their house and look
at the window and look in and then I would think, I wish I could get in.
I wish I could live in a house like this.
When the school time come, we would go into the school room and
set down and they would look downward and say something that sounded
like this, "Cut padder oo wot een habben". We would be very puzzled about
it but that must be when they was say the Lord's prayer.
When I was a small boy, I used to have some sleeping visions
and it was about some big red things and a fine place and beautiful things.
When I saw pictures of big red houses, then I would remember my dreams.
Then, somehow rather I want to learn very much. I tried to go to school as
I got chance but don't you know anybody cannot learn much just by going to
school part of the time.
Another thing that bothered me when I tried to read, my step father
said things that were not suitable to me--when I heard there were fine
schools outside, there was one in the state of Pennsylvania and another
at a place called Unalaska and at that place was a home for children and
one can learn all he wants to. I felt I want to go and of course I said
I would. Then he asked the Captain of the Revenue Cutter Bear and after
a while he told me that Captain Jarvis would take me to Unalaska. I was
very glad and may be you don't know how glad I was and how much I thank
Mr.Lopp but I didn't say anything because I was bashful.
Before my parents go away I told my mother that I will go to Unalaska,
"Oh dear, don't go", she said and she cried and begged me not to go but
I said to her, "Mother, I will go whether you want me to go or not because
I can't learn here at all." She said, "probably you will never come back."
I told her I will come back in a few years. That summer they went on some
trading expedition and while they were gone, I went. I left Kin-ge-gan
in October 10, 1899. I must be about 16 then. Before I went, I told my
cousin Ki-uz-ruk, "I am going outside to learn more about the Bible and
God and after I have learned, I will come back and help you.
When I got to Unalaska, one of the SS Bear sailors took me to the
Jesse Lee home, a large two and a half story building at the end of the
village. There, I met Dr. Newhall first time and also Mrs. Newhall. I
will never forget what he said to me when I reached that home, "You are
welcome to this house. I will try to take care of you best I can." He and
his loving wife did take cared of me all through while I was with them.
It was the 7th of October 1899. There doctor Newhall was very busy on the
sick folks that time, seven or eight patience. Only one or two died. I tried
very hard to learn. When I began to school, you think I was in the class
with bigger boys? I guess not. I was with the little bits of children in
the chart class. Oh my, I was very much ashamed of myself and so I was trying
to learn fast as ever I can.
Finely in a few weeks I was in third reader. Then I thought I would
be better to study alone, so I asked Dr. Newhall to teach me at home
and so he did. Dr. Newhall and his wife are very kind when I was with
them. They had a child who was born on Nov. 6, 1899 and I took cared
of her but she died and you do not know how much I missed her. After two
years, my teacher took me outside when they went there. It was in July
1901 when we reached Seattle and when I saw all those big houses I remembered
my dreams. Those trees and big ships I thought very grand. I saw the car
going back and forth and I thought everything was wonderful.
I stayed in Seattle a few days. Then we started to go eastward and
we took the Northern Pacific Railroad. When we was on the state of Montana,
it was so hot it nearly make me sick. I put my hand out of the car window
and it was so very hot, I felt to like I'm into a very hot oven. It was
109 above zero.
In July 25, we reached the city of Chicago at 9:30 A.M. I thought
that was big city everything was supernatural sight. We went from there
to the city of Philadelphia and there I saw many animals in the zoological
garden. I saw 142 different kinds animals in the zoo and heard some fine
music, all kinds of them. We stayed there several days. Oh my, I would
be uncomfortable from the heat. In the daytime I would just be setting
down and sweating and in the nights it would be comfortable. Sometime in
daytime, I would go to bathroom and pour some cold water in the tub and lay
in the cold water for hours and be comfortable.
When we left there, we arrived at New York City in July 31 and there
I met a very good man named Capt. H.L. Meeker. I was told once he was
a drunkard man but some years past he was converted and he was working
for his Lord and I saw his chapel. He had make an old boat into a chapel.
But he was a very good man, I might say for changed.
I saw those great many buildings just like a visson. We left there
in August one and took a fine steamer up the Hudson and arrived at Hagandan,
N.Y. and the next day went to a fine Methodist Church. Here I took the
name Warren Ad-loo-at Sowle. I stayed most at Stoneham, Mass. and went
to Boston many times. When I went to Lynn Beach that seemed like my own
home. I talked in a great many places and used to put my furs on to show
them. Another thing I used to interest them was how we first used the flour
and we made just soup. We got it from the whalers when they come to trade.
One time I visited Mrs. Thornton in Auburn Maine (Mr. thornton was killed
by some eskimos soon after they took up the work at Wales). I surprised Mrs.
Thornton very much but she was glad to see me. She was so glad that the
tears were just running down, saddened by the death of her husband
and felt, perhaps all their sacrifices and hard labor of love had been in
vain but some seeds that were sown had fallen on good ground. It reminded
me of her being in my place with her beloved husband. Myself, I was glad
to see her then. I had very nice visited her.
When I was leaving there, Mrs. Thornton was seeming to be sad--she
was saying she would miss me very much. There were no doubt that I missed
her presence but I had to go back to my place for I was not forgetting
my people.
At Southport Conn. I met a man named Mr. Holman and he was fine
man and he showed me many interesting things and he bought for me a little
organ, which I have it now.
Then I was bounding to my home. I left Stoneham, Mass., on April
10, 1903. All of my met friends said farewell to me. I must tell about
my teachers family. They were very good people and were very good to me
when I was with them. Specially Chester Newhall, I used to sleep with him
and he was like my own brother. I miss them that time very much. I
will never forget them, especially Dr. Newhall. He treated me just like
his own child - gave me nice home with them and his wife took cared of me
like her own child. I will never blot them out of mine, always will remember
them, they have done so much good to me.
I was on my way five days without stopping. One time in the train
a man came to me an asked me if I would like to have some tea as I was
eating my dinner. He pleased me very much for he was the only
one who spoke kindly to me.
When I reached Seattle I stayed with some people named "Gauntlett"
and the boys were very kind to me while I was waiting for the good old
Bear to come. I attended some churches and visited some people. Almost
every place I went they seem to want to help out some. I received a letter
from Mr. Lopp which made me feel more to go home. It was very encouraging
letter. Finely the Revenue Cutter came and I was glad to see her come. Left
Seattle at 5:10 P.M. on April 26, 1903. What you think happen. You think
I went right straight to Kin-ge-gan. I guess not. When we reached See More
Narrows, we ran against a rock wall and we had to go back to Seattle to
get fixed.
I was very disappointed but we were lucky not to get wreck. You
see that shows the ship are a strong boat. While they were fixing that
boat, I used to go to Seattle to buy some things and when I came back
the old "bosun" would growled and said, "Are you buying the whole Seattle?"
You will run away with it some time. Before I started, I received another
letter from Mr. Lopp saying they were anxious for me to come back home but
when I got home they were gone outside and I was very disappointed. I reached
home July 1903.
Just a little while after I came, Mr. Lee and his family came. Since
then I have been trying to help in mission work. Since that summer I have
began that interpretation work for the missionaries at this place of
Kin-ge-gan (Wales).
After while, Mr. Cross came and I worked with him and he was very
nice man. He was the man who wants to help the people and had done much
good. Of course, others came too and they had done some good even when
they had been talked about bad.
Of course, some are working just for the money they gets. Some are
working just because they wants to help the people. They have the right
spirit in them, as Mr. Lopp did and his wife. We assistance eskimo are
the same way. Some works just because they wants to get some money. They
have no right spirits in them.. I was trying very hard to bring my people
into new life. Of course some of them didn't like at all, they always trying
the other way.
You don't know how much I was trying to help and lead my people
to be good village homes, although they did not like to be lead or told.
Some time they made it so difference and difficulty I used to be near discouragement.
But I always tried to remember some words that I used to hear from my
loving friend Chester Newhall, "You can do more good by being good than
any other say."
Mr. Shields have sent us a nurse, being Mrs. E.W.Tashner, who left
the Methodist hospital in Nome for care of us. We hear her in church speak
very good words on watch and pray. She say many good things to us. We
will help her all we can in the work of religion. She is very fine lady
as was Mrs. Lopp and Mrs. Thornton. I am waiting to move my religion work
to Shish-ma-reff and anyone who feels like to help this work may do so.
How can I get to Shishmareff? The weather is uncertain, blow and blow
almost every day and big surf. Some say "Wait till when you can go on
dog team." I guess so.
Now I want to thank those who had helped me in past years. I want
to remember and thank the Methodist Mission in Unalaska, Alaska because
they help me very much. Now I want to thank doctor Newhall for he had
done more good to me than any other man will ever do to me. Another one
I will remember, Mr. Lopp, because he was the one who have done more good
in my place than any other man will ever do to us. If it were not for
Mr. Lopp we would have nothing to say about.
I used to remember what he say to me just before I left Wales. That
time, when I was going outside, "They will like you better in Unalaska
if you do not do bad things."
The End of Warren Adlooat's
Narrative
In the winter of 1918, Warren Ad-loo-at was working as an interpreter
for a mission school in the village of Shishmareff(60 miles from Kin-ge-gan).
His wife, Stella (Oknaklook), decided to stay in Kin-ge-gan with their
children (3 daughters: Unitakuk b. 1904, Ooquak b.1908 and Tiakana b.
1910) and (3 sons: Chester Sehowarna b. 1911, Winfred Nemhlap b. 1914
and Warren Kehmesook Jr.b. 1916).
Early that winter, the Spanish Influenza epidemic reached Kin-ge-gan
and quickly killed almost half of the village. Ad-loo-at rushed home and
found his mother (Wey-ak-k-new) had passed away and his wife and children
were ill.
Word of the tragic conditions in Kin-ge-gan quickly reached Nome,
so the Superintendent of Schools sent a nurse to help the village. She
went directly to Ad-loo-at's home and found him very ill. He, and a newborn
son, passed away soon after but Stella and the other children survived.
Six months later, Stella married Paul Kaingnizima of Wales (he lost his
wife, Lily Ashaahok, in the epidemic of 1918). Stella and Paul had 4 children
together before he died in 1935: Nora Nowadlook b. 1921, Catherine Soolingwalik
b. 1923, Glenna Ukolook b. 1926 and James Staluk b. 1929. Stella passed away
in 1941.
1900 U.S. Census for Jesse Lee Mission in Unalaska
Adlooat born 6/1883 Eskimo
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1910 U.S. Census for
Wales
Adlooat, Warren age 24
Adlooat, Sowle age 22 wife (later called Stella)
Adlooat, Unetakuk age 5 daughter (later called Agnes)
Adlooat, Ooguak age 2 daughter (later called Helen)
Adlooat, Tiakana age 8 months daughter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1920 U.S. Census for Wales
Kaingnizinia, *Paul age 25
Kaingnizinia, Stella age 39 wife (Warren Adlooat's widow)
Kaingnizinia, Agnes age 14 daughter (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's daughter)
Kaingnizinia, Helen age 12 daughter (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's daughter)
Kaingnizinia, Chester (Sckowarna) age 8 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
Kaingnizinia, Winfred (Neukolovuk) age 6 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
Kaingnizinia, Warren (Kitmesuk) age 4 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1930 U.S. Census for Wales
Kaingnizinia, Paul age 25
Kaingnizinia, Stella age 41 wife (Warren
Adlooat's widow)
Kaingnizinia, Nora Nowadlook age 9 daughter (Paul and Stella daughter)
Kaingnizinia, Catherine Soolingwalik age 7 daughter (Paul and Stella's daughter)
Kaingnizinia, Glenna Ukolook age 4 daughter (Paul and Stella's daughter)
Kaingnizinia, James Staluk age 1 son (Paul
and Stella's son)
Adlooat, Chester Sehowarna age 18 step-son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Winfred Nemhlap age 15 step-son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Warren Kehmesook age 13 step-son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's son)
Oxereok, Charles Kiomeo age 26
Oxereok, Agnes age 24 wife
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's daughter)
Oxereok, Frank Adlooat age 8 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Ernest age 6 son
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Mary age 4 daughter
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, Naomi age 2 daughter (Warren and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, David age 6 months son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1940 U.S. Census for Wales
Kaingnizinia, Stella age 51 widow (widow of
Warren Adlooat (widow of Paul Kaingnizinia)
Kaingnizinia, Glenna age 15 (daughter
of Paul and Stella)
Kaingnizinia, James age 11 (son
of Paul and Stella)
Adlooat, Chester age 28 (Warren and
Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Winfred age 25 (Warren and
Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Warren age 23 (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's son)
Oxereok, Charles age 38
Oxereok, Agnes O. age 35 wife
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's daughter)
Oxereok, Frank A. age 18 son
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Ernest E. age 16 son
(Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Mary A. age 14 daughter (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, Naomi E. age 12 daughter (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, David E. age 11 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Daniel K. age 7 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Charles A. Jr. age 5 son (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Sherman K. age 3 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Fred W. age 2 son
(Warren amd Stella Alooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Jane T. age 4 months (Warren and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1950 U.S. Census for Wales
Oxereok, Agnes age 45 widow (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's daughter)
Oxereok, Frank age 28 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Mary age 25 daughter (Warren and
Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, David age 20 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Daniel age 18 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Fred age 12 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Vivian age 9 daughter(Warren and
Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Oxereok, Issac age 6 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Oxereok, Herbert age 5 son (Warren and Stella Adlooat's grandson)
Adlooat, Winfred age 35 widower (Warren and
Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Helen age 2 daughter (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's granddaughter)
Adlooat, Warren age 33 brother (Warren
and Stella Adlooat's son)
Adlooat, Chester age 38 (Warren and
Stella Adlooat's son)
Kaingnizinia, James age 21 1/2 brother (Paul and Stella Kaingnizinia's son)