Rika's Landing Roadhouse,
also known as Rika's Landing Site or the
McCarty Roadhouse, is a roadhouse located at a historically
important crossing of the Tanana River,
off mile 274.5 of the Richardson
Highway in Big
Delta
, in the Southeast
Fairbanks Census Area
, Alaska
, United States
.
The roadhouse is named after Rika Wallen, who obtained it from John
Hajdukovich and operated it for many years. It became a hub of
activity in that region of the interior. With the construction of
the
ALCAN (now Alaska) Highway and the
replacement of the ferry with a bridge downstream, patronage
declined.
The roadhouse is in the Big Delta State
Historical Park
and was added to the National Register of
Historic Places in 1976.
Background
The
Richardson Highway, an important
route through the Alaska
Interior
that
contributed significantly to development and settlement of the
region it traversed, began as a pack trail from the port at
Valdez
to Eagle
, downstream on the Yukon River
from Dawson. It was
built in 1898 by the
U.S. Army to provide an "all-American
" route to
the Klondike gold fields.
After the
rush ended, the Army kept the trail open in order to connect its
posts at Fort
Liscum
, in Valdez, and Fort
Egbert, in Eagle. The Fairbanks
' gold rush in
1902, and the construction of a WAMCATS
telegraph line along the trail in 1903 by
the U.S. Army Signal Corps directed in part by
then Lieutenant
Billy
Mitchell,
made the Valdez-to-Eagle trail, and its
branch to Fairbanks, one of the most important access routes to the
Alaska
Interior
.
Many roadhouses, some 37 in alland some now on the
National Register of
Historic Places, were built along this trail for the
convenience of travelers. These roadhouses offered meals, sleeping
quarters, and supplies. They were typically located about 15 to 20
miles apart.
Early activity
The
Tanana River was one of the major
rivers to be crossed along the Valdez-Eagle trail.
A ferry was
established just upriver of the Tanana's confluence with the
Delta
River
, at a location then called Bates Landing.
Bates
Landing was about 12 km (8 miles) north of the current
settlement of Delta
Junction
, in the area
known now as Big Delta. The government collected a ferry
toll on the south side from all those traveling northbound.The
WAMCATS telegraph line was relocated to
parallel the trail after a fire. McCarty Station was established at
the line's crossing of the Tanana in 1907 to maintain the
telegraph. Several log cabins housed the telegraph office, a
dispatcher, two repairmen and their supplies.
A trading post was constructed on the south bank of the Tanana, at
Bates Landing in April 1904 by a prospector named Ben Bennett on
his claim of , but Bennett sold the post and land to Daniel G.
McCarty in April 1905. However since
E.T. Barnette,
the founder of Fairbanks, and McCarty's former employer, had
financed the goods in the post, Barnette retained ownership of
them. The post property, now being used as a roadhouse, soon became
known as McCarty's. Another prospector named Alonzo Maxey, and a
friend, built Bradley's Roadhouse to compete with McCarty's and by
1907, McCarty's had been transferred to Maxey.
Hajdukovich era
In 1906, or perhaps sometime after,
Jovo 'John' Hajdukovich, an enterpreneur
who had come to Alaska from Montenegro
in 1903,sensed a business opportunity and
purchased the trading post and roadhouse from Maxey. Hajdukovich
built a new and bigger roadhouse in 1909 using logs floated
downriver, but he continued to use the old trading post to store
his gear.
Hadukovich had other business interests,
including prospecting, freighting, acting as a hunting guide by taking hunting parties
into the nearby Granite Mountains
, and trading with, and advocating for, the Athabaskan natives,(later being
instrumental in creating the
Tetlin
Reserve)as well as the responsibilities of US Game Commissioner
for the area,and was not able to personally operate the roadhouse
full time. As with many informally managed roadhouses, Hadukovich
asked travelers to "make themselves at home and leave some money on
the table" for what they used. Despite this informality, the
operations prospered.
Starting in 1904 the trail was in the process of being upgraded.In
1907,or certainly by 1910, the
Alaska Road Commission completed the
upgrade, upgrading the trail to a wagon road. The head of the
project was Major (later U.S. Army General)
Wilds P. Richardson, for whom the highway was
later named. Stages plied the road, using horse drawn sledges in
winter and wagons in summer. By 1913 the roadhouse was a local
center of activity for gold prospectors, local hunters, traders,
and freighters.
Meanwhile
Erika 'Rika' Wallen, born Lovisa Erika Jakobson in 1874 on a farm
near Örebro
Sweden
, came to
America. She first came to Minneapolis
, Minnesota
with her sister in 1891 to join her brother Carl
Jakobson, changing their last names to Wallen. After Carl died in an
accident, the sisters moved to San Francisco
, Rika taking a job as a cook for the Hills Brothers coffee family which
lasted until the 1906 San
Francisco earthquake. In 1916 Rika traveled to Valdez
, it is said "because she thought Alaska would be
like Sweden".
Rika takes over the Roadhouse

Stable with winter ventilation
system

Privy with wallpaper visible
After
jobs cooking at the Kennecott
copper mine and for a
Fairbanks boarding house, Rika made
her way to Big Delta, and in 1917, or 1918, John Hadukovich hired
Rika Wallen to manage operations at the roadhouse, then still known
as McCarty's.
Although John had many business interests he was not always
solvent. For example, in later years he missed being paid for
timber supplied to the
ALCAN Highway
project due to not keeping records, and in either 1918, or 1923,
ownership of the roadhouse was transferred to Rika for "$10.00 and
other considerations," presumably in lieu of back wages. Their
friendship and partnership nevertheless continued for many years,
although it was not clear exactly what their relationship was. The
roadhouse was soon named Rika's following local custom.At that
time, the roadhouse had eleven bedrooms, a living room and a large
kitchen/dining area.
By 1925, Rika had applied for US citizenship, and filed a
homestead claim on an adjacent where she began
growing food and raising livestock, including sheep, chicken, and
goats. Sheep provided wool that she wove, and goats that she raised
provided milk, butter and cheese. She also raised silver fox,
ducks, geese, rabbits and honeybees, as well as growing grain using
a yoke of oxen for plowing.Rika was a natural farmer who was able
to successfully grow crops where others failed. She developed a
heating and ventilation system for her stable to allow her
livestock to successfully survive the harsh winters.
When Rika bought the roadhouse, it still had dirt floors and rough
walls. In order to improve the interior, she scavenged random
wallpaper, sometimes using different patterns on different walls of
the same room, and made a hardwood
parquet
floor with wooden kerosene crates collected from the freighters
and boatmen that patronized the roadhouse. Her ability to grow
crops and to make a pleasant inn meant that travelers would see a
table set with fresh milk and eggs, berries, fish, game, and
produce picked from the garden and nearby orchard, before retiring
to clean comfortable beds in the multistory building. A travelog of
the Richardson Highway published in 1929 gave this description of
Rika's: "a commodious roadhouse boasting of such luxuries as fresh
milk and domestic fowls."
In 1926 or thereabouts, Rika added a wing which she used for
additional living space, a liquor store, fur storage and the Big
Delta (then known as Washburn) Post Office. She was the postmaster
until 1946. Eventually Rika also homesteaded an adjoining piece of
land, bringing her holdings to .
End of an era
In the 1930s, with the construction of the
Alaska Railroad completed in 1922, and due
to other factors such as the
Great
Depression, freight traffic declined. In 1935, the Alaska Road
Commission, in an attempt to force shippers to use the railroad,
raised the toll at the Tanana ferry crossing to almost 10 dollars a
ton. The truckers rebelled at this and a series of skirmishes and
pirate ferry operations occurred, lasting until the start of World
War II.
With the coming of the war, and the construction of the
ALCAN Highway which connected to the
Richardson south of Big Delta, traffic waned further. The ferry
crossing was replaced by a wooden bridge, and then later, a larger
steel bridge some distance downriver, and thus the highway was
rerouted away from the roadhouse. Rika operated the roadhouse
through the 1940s and early 1950s although in later years guests
were by invitation only. John Hajdukovich died in 1965 and Rika
Wallen died four years later in 1969.
Today
According to Judy Ferguson in
Parallel Destinies, a
biography of John and Rika:
- "For fifty years, Rika was a stake in the ground for the
roaming John. While John traded and prospected, Rika ran
the hub of the Upper Tanana's cross-roads. Her
establishment was "town" to the three hundred people who walked the
trails to the Alaskan-Canadian border. John and Rika were
the history of the Upper Tanana Valley."
Rika's Roadhouse and the adjacent outbuildings and property are now
the Big Delta State Historical Park. In 1976 the roadhouse was
placed on the National Register of Historic Places. The structure
was rebuilt in the late 1970s on a new foundation using original
timbers, and with a restoration of the packing crate floor in some
areas.. It now functions as a museum and some rooms have been
fitted with 1920s-1930s period furniture and accessories donated by
local residents. The property also has a food service facility
called the "Packhouse Pavilion" operated by a local
concessionaire.
See also
References
- as mentioned in the review at
- as quoted in the review at and elsewhere
Further reading
- Ferguson, Judy (2002). Parallel Destinies. Glas
Publishing, ISBN 978-0971604407. (A biography of Rika Wallen and
John Hajdukovich, written by a resident of Big Delta).
External links
- NRHP listing for Southeast Fairbanks, including
Rika's
- NRHP document (placeholder, not yet scanned by
the NRHP, but the doc will be at this URL when it is per their
system)
- Big Delta State Historical Park information
page
- A pictorial tour of the Big Delta State Historical
Park
- Big Delta from the Alaska Department of Commerce
Community Information Database
- Itinerary of a mid 1920s visit to Alaska
including a stay at Rika's
- Going Places Alaska And The Yukon For Families, by
Nancy Thalia Reynolds at Google
Books
- Alaska Off the Beaten Path, 6th edition, by Melissa
Devaughn, Deb Vanasse at Google
Books
- Four pioneers photo of John, Rika, and two other
pioneers late in life
- Still image of current
ferry at McCarty (use of that name dates it as older than the
next two images)
- Another still image of ferry crossing the
Tanana, 1930, Rika's visible in background. (from Digital
Alaska)
- Video clip of ferry crossing the Tanana,
1935-36, Rika's visible in background. (from Digital
Alaska)