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Daughters of Hanford: Hanford’s Landscape Is Written With Human Stories

KAI-HUEI YAU
Ellen Prendergast Kennedy

In southeast Washington state, a group of farms has been frozen in time. It’s at Hanford, the area the federal government took over to make plutonium during World War II.

“It’s amazing that it’s been preserved in a way by the Manhattan Project,” said archaeologist Ellen Prendergast Kennedy. “And that some places are still completely untouched.”

Left untouched since 1943, when the government gave people a month to leave. The whole area has been restricted since then to make plutonium for bombs and clean up after it.

Nearly 60 years later, Kennedy was working for the federal government, collecting oral histories of people who’d been forced off the land.

“You know these places were people’s homes and that we now call cultural resources,” she said. That’s science-lingo for a landform, building, tools or anything left behind or important to humans.

'I’m always looking at the ground’

Kennedy is always looking down.

“All the time,” she said. “That’s what you do when you’re an archaeologist. No matter where I am, if I’m out at my property where we live, I’m always looking at the ground.”

Kennedy stops amid the sagebrush on the Hanford Reach. She stoops down. Picks up something dime-sized. It’s brown.

“It could be a lithic flake,” she said. “It could have been knocked off of a rock as part of a tool-making process.”

That she spotted this small bit isn’t so surprising. Kennedy started her career right here at Hanford.

Getting close to a lived experience

On a hot day in 2001, Kennedy drove a woman in her 80s out to the restricted Hanford site. They were headed to the woman’s old farmstead. The woman laid eyes on that land for the first time since World War II.

“And in the background of course was the reactors, so you could see that,” Kennedy recalled.

When they arrived the woman recognized a small rise in the land where her home had been. Then she pointed to a plant. It was a matrimonial vine she and her husband planted when they first settled this farm. And now here the vine was -- still growing -- 60-years later without care. It was a big moment, with few words.

“People of a certain generation aren’t as expressive as younger folks are especially when experiencing things, at least emotionally,” Kennedy said. “So I kind of got the sense that she was a little more in awe kind of and surprised than maybe she let on.”

“It took me back to what her experience was. She had been married and I think she had already had kids just before they were made to leave.”

This is at the core of Kennedy’s work. Getting as close as possible to a lived experience from the past.

“It made me in my own way think, ‘I wonder what that was like to be a mother, and a farmer’s wife in this, in this, in this place,’ Kennedy said. “I feel like I was able maybe to put myself more in her shoes a little bit.”

One big history book

Kennedy said many evicted farmers, like this woman, had mixed feelings toward their country: Patriotism and bitterness.

Those feelings and stories have been preserved. Some have not been released to the public. Others are included in government reports. Stories like the woman from the farm -- of artifacts, memory and loss.

“So you can hear that story, and then if you can attach that story to the landscape,” Kennedy said. “It’s just so evocative. The landscape itself. And with the story’s texture and character and it kind of makes it come alive.”

Kennedy said Hanford’s landscape is one big history book -- tribes, farmers, the Great War. To read it, you have to stare closely at the ground.

Anna King calls Richland, Washington home and loves unearthing great stories about people in the Northwest. She reports for the Northwest News Network from a studio at Washington State University, Tri-Cities. She covers the Mid-Columbia region, from nuclear reactors to Mexican rodeos.