When Pamela Caddell died of COVID-19 last month, there was no funeral — her family knew that, as a former nurse, she wouldn’t want anyone else to be exposed to the disease.
But there was still something her husband, Richard, wanted to say — needed to say — so he sat down in his empty house to write her obituary.
After honoring her decades in medicine and listing her surviving relatives, he included a plea to anyone who picked up the Courier & Press in Evansville, Ind.
“Pam died of Covid-19,” Richard wrote. “It was her fervent wish that everyone take this horrible disease seriously. This was her last wish to all people.”
Richard may not have known it, but the obituary for his wife belongs to a growing genre that dates to the summer. At the time, President Trump and his Republican allies were pushing to keep businesses open and downplaying the possibility of a deadly second wave of infections.
Now with a third wave overwhelming hospitals across the country, Americans are increasingly turning their private grief into public calls for action as the COVID-19 death toll grows by thousands each day.
Unlike Trump, the mourners do not have tens of millions of Twitter followers, nor do television cameras hang on their every word. Instead they’re buying obituaries in local newspapers, sometimes for several hundred dollars. There have been some efforts to turn the obituaries into a more coordinated activist campaign, but for many it’s a decision they reach on their own, a reflection of their own frustration, anger and pain.
“A lot of people knew my wife,” Richard said. “Her message was to take it seriously. Everybody. Take it seriously. And there’s a lot of people that I’m afraid that they don’t. They listen to the wrong person.”
Richard and Pamela met when they were teenagers, and she was a carhop at a root beer stand. They got married when he was 21, she 18, and had a son and a daughter.
Although Pamela retired from nursing years ago, she helped care for her sister Debbie, who had become ill with lung cancer. Somehow Debbie contracted the coronavirus and died, and Pamela got sick too.
Four days after testing positive, she turned to Richard shortly after midnight.
“It’s time. I’m ready to go. Call the ambulance,” she said.
Pamela lingered in the hospital for nearly a month, including weeks on a ventilator, before she died Nov. 27. She was 71.
They would have been married for 53 years in March. Now it’s just Richard, 74, and Harry, the couple’s 14-year-old pug.
“I have never lived alone before in my whole life,” Richard said. “And it is not easy adjusting.”
Richard wrote about his wife’s selflessness in her obituary: “She never took away from people and her greatest satisfaction was helping people. She was happiest when she saw the smiles from all the people in her life.”
“That’s the type of person Pam was,” Richard said. “And people should know that. And she should not be dead. She should be alive.”
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Kristin Urquiza had no doubt about how she would choose to remember her father, Mark Urquiza, in his obituary.
“Far too often, leadership failure is hidden in the private grief of everyday people,” said Kristin, 39, a deputy director at an environmental activism organization in San Francisco. “I had no recourse other than to be honest.”
She wrote: “Mark, like so many others, should not have died from COVID-19. His death is due to the carelessness of the politicians who continue to jeopardize the health of brown bodies through clear lack of leadership, refusal to acknowledge the severity of this crisis, and inability and unwillingness to give clear and decisive direction on how to minimize risk.”
Kristin called it an “honest obituary,” one that reckoned not only with the loss of a loved one but also with the broader political and public health context of their death.
She had tried to keep her father from gathering with friends and family in Phoenix, but he wasn’t worried.
“Kristin,” he told her, “why would the governor say it’s safe when it’s not safe?”
“I couldn’t compete with that,” she said.
Kristin believes her father, who worked as an inspector at an aerospace factory before getting furloughed, contracted the virus at a karaoke party. She was driving home to see him when he died June 30.
Column One
A showcase for compelling storytelling from the Los Angeles Times.
Two months after his death, Kristin briefly commanded a national spotlight when she spoke at the Democratic National Convention, memorably saying that her father’s “only preexisting condition was trusting Donald Trump.” She’s gone on to raise money to help others hold vigils and publish obituaries for their loved ones.
“Obituaries are sort of an advertisement for the dead. I wanted the last word,” she said. “My dad was ripped from my life without my permission, without his permission, without the opportunity to say goodbye. It was my opportunity to push back.”
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It took a month before Paul Garvison was ready to write an obituary for his father, John.
“There was a lot of anger,” he said. “It didn’t need to be this way.”
John was 95 and had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, so his family knew that an infection could prove fatal. But when he did contract the virus, he seemed to improve after a weeklong hospitalization, and Paul drove him back to his nursing home in Virginia.
The recovery didn’t last. When Paul visited him again, he had to wear a protective suit, face covering, gloves and goggles.
“I’m not sure he recognized me by then,” Paul said. John died Nov. 5.
About a week before, the president’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., said the death toll had fallen to “almost nothing.”
Paul decided to place the obituary in Santa Cruz, where his father had worked for the county, establishing a program for placing and caring for adopted children.
“His death was due to neglect of the vulnerable by the Trump Administration, which has consistently downplayed the dangers of this terrible disease,” the obituary said. “Due to isolation requirements to prevent the spread of the virus, his family was not able to be with him.”
Paul said he wanted the world to know that the virus isn’t something that just happens to other people.
“You hear a lot of ‘I don’t know anybody who really has it,’” he said. “Well, now you do. Now you know somebody who’s died of it.”
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Most obituaries run in a local newspaper or are posted on a funeral home website. They typically circulate just among friends and family, but occasionally one goes viral, which is what happened when Courtney Farr wrote about his father, Marvin.
Marvin was living in a nursing home in Scott City, Kan., and he became the fourth resident to test positive in an outbreak that began shortly before Thanksgiving. His son could only say goodbye through a video call from his phone.
Courtney had studied journalism as a college student, and he relied on that training as he wrote about Marvin’s death Dec. 1.
“He died in a room not his own, being cared for by people dressed in confusing and frightening ways,” he wrote. “He died with covid-19, and his final days were harder, scarier and lonelier than necessary. He was not surrounded by friends and family.”
Then Courtney poured out his frustration at the lack of a communal response to the pandemic.
“He was born into an America recovering from the Great Depression and about to face World War 2, times of loss and sacrifice difficult for most of us to imagine. Americans would be asked to ration essential supplies and send their children around the world to fight and die in wars of unfathomable destruction. He died in a world where many of his fellow Americans refuse to wear a piece of cloth on their face to protect one another.”
The obituary ricocheted across the internet, and Courtney soon found himself speaking about his father to journalists from cable news and public radio.
Every day, one or two letters or cards show up at his house, often from healthcare workers or people who have also lost a loved one to the virus. His Facebook page has been flooded with comments.
“My mother died in much the same way of Covid in April, and I have felt the same frustration and anger towards people who continue to say it is their decision to wear a mask and they think the virus is a hoax,” one person wrote. “Every time I hear that, I want to scream.”
“My mother died alone in a nursing home in August,” wrote another. “Sending love and prayers.”
Sometimes the response has been overwhelming, but Courtney said he’s come to understand why his father’s obituary struck such a chord.
“Just to read something or see someone who feels like they understand where you are — it can be so powerful. It relieves that loneliness element of it,” he said. “If that’s the only thing that comes from it, then all of this was worth it.”