OTTO MILLER was born Otto Martinek, in West Depere, Wisconsin on September 4, 1914. His parents, Jan/John and Sophia Caska Martinek, were both born in Czechoslovakia but met and married in Chicago in 1910. Otto’s older brothers were born in Chicago and in 1914 the family moved to Wisconsin where Otto and three other siblings were born.
At some point after he left home, Otto changed his last name to Miller, and moved out west. He was briefly in California before coming to Alaska by 1939.
In 1940 Otto was 25 years old and single, working as a carpenter on a railroad bridge project in Lawing, Alaska, an area also known as Alaska Nellie’s Homestead, located at Mile 23 of the Seward Highway in Kenai Peninsula Borough, Alaska.
It is the former homestead of Nellie Neal Lawing. She had migrated to Alaska in 1915 and ran a number of roadhouses for the Alaska Railroad before settling at the Roosevelt roadhouse on Kenai Lake in 1923, where she built her homestead. She planned to marry Kenneth Holden after settling, but he died in an industrial accident before their marriage; his cousin Billie Lawing then proposed to her, and the two married. A post office opened in the area in 1924; Nellie was the first postmistress, and the post office was named Lawing in her honor. Nellie was a wildlife expert and trophy hunter, and she kept her hunting trophies, which included three bears, in the roadhouse. She was also known to keep pet bear cubs outside her home. The homestead became a popular lodge due to Nellie’s wildlife lectures, and it attracted guests such as Will Rogers, Alice Calhoun, and Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. After Billie died in 1936, Nellie continued to operate the lodge and roadhouse until her death in 1956. The roadhouse was destroyed in the 1960s, likely by the rising waters of Kenai Lake after the 1964 Alaska earthquake. The homestead was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975; at the time, only the homestead and a number of outbuildings still stood at the site. The homestead was used as a tourist shop in the 1970s and later became a bed and breakfast; however, it was eventually vacated. In 1998, the Alaska Association for Historic Preservation listed the site as one of the ten most endangered historic properties in the state.
At the time of WWII, Otto enlisted in the US Army. He fought in the Aleutian Islands and was discharged as a Staff Sergeant.
In his later years, Otto divided his time between Seldovia and Washington. During the summers he worked on fishing boats in Seldovia. He spent his winters in Sequim, Washington, in a trailer on a 12-acre parcel of land that he owned.
Throughout his life, Otto was considered an impressive “handyman”. He built a number of homes in Seldovia. He also converted his family’s chicken coop into a bedroom for his mother.
He was hard-working and tough but kind-hearted. As far as his family knows, he never married or had children.
Otto died in Sequim, Washington on September 7, 1997 and is interred in the Seldovia City Cemetery in plot #285.
Graveside Posting: SSG US Army World War II Sep 4, 1914 - Sep 7, 1997