1 Carla Higginson, interview with Sara Dolan, Resources Stewardship Program Manager, San Juan Island National Historical Park, May 6, 2023.
2 Unless otherwise cited, personal information regarding Anna Pike Rosler comes from her descendants, particularly the various family writings of Sylvia Rank Landahl Rogers, Carla Higginson’s grandmother and wife to one of Anna Pike’s grandsons. Her writings are housed at the
San Juan Historical Society.
3 The author extends special thanks to Joe Dolan and Katrina Jagondinsky for helping guide her through the complicated legal and political history relating to Indigenous and settler communities on San Juan Island. For Coast Salish perspectives on this history, see Ann Nugent,
Lummi Elders Speak (Lynden, Wash.: Lynden Tribune, 1982), and Pauline R. Hillaire,
Rights Remembered: A Salish Grandmother Speaks on American Indian History and the Future (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2016).
4 Katrina Jagondinsky, “A Tale of Two Sisters: Family Histories from the Strait Salish Borderlands,”
Western Historical Quarterly 47, no. 1 (Summer 2016): 29.
5 Weber-Roochvarg, “Mitchell Bay Tribe Descendants.” Hillaire,
Rights Remembered, 205-207.
6 For more on how miscegenation laws varied during the late nineteenth century in Washington Territory – from an outright ban of Indigenous-white unions in 1855 to repealing this ban in 1868 – see Peggy Pascoe,
What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), 98-100.
7 According to census data, about half of San Juan Island households in 1870 were interracial or Indigenous. Jagondinsky, “A Tale of Two Sisters,” 31-32, 48. Candace Wellman has found that in the first two decades of Whatcom county’s existence, which included the San Juan Islands at the time, 80-90 percent of marriages were between Native women and Euro-American settlers. See
Interwoven Lives: Indigenous Mothers of Salish Coast Communities (Pullman, WA: Washington University Press, 2019), 15.
8 Carla Higginson, communication to the author, January 5, 2024.
9 Jagondinsky, “A Tale of Two Sisters,” 38.
10 Katrina Jagodinsky, “‘In Family Way’: Guarding Indigenous Women’s Children in Washington Territory,”
American Indian Quarterly 37, no. 2 (Spring 2013); Pascoe,
What Comes Naturally, 94-104. For more on Native women’s role on the edges of empire in the North American West, see Sylvia Van Kirk,
Many Tender Ties: Women in Fur-Trader Society, 1670-1870 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1870).
11 Sylvia Landahl, January 1972 and March 1978.
12 Sylvia Landahl, April 23, 1986.
13 In fact, both Christopher’s and Anna’s local obituaries neglected to mention Anna’s Alaskan Native ancestry. This common practice worked to erase Native women from the historical record in favor of glorifying the white woman pioneer. See “Another Pioneer Gone to His Rest -Christopher Rosler Answers the Last Call,”
San Juan Islander (February 23, 1907), 1; and “Anna Pike Rosler,”
San Juan Islander (July 9, 1909).