Orah Dee Clark was born in Firth, Nebraska.[1] Clark started teaching in 1906, which is when she moved to Alaska.[1][2] She worked in Kodiak, Anvik, and Tanana, Alaska.[1] Clark was the first superintendent of the first school in Anchorage, Alaska starting in 1915.[2][3] After teaching in Anchorage, she co-founded schools along the Alaska Railroad. She would teach throughout Alaska, including the Aleutian Islands.[2] She would never marry, per law that women teachers either had to be "married to the students" or leave the field to be married.[3] She was a proponent of desegregated schools where Native American and white students could learn together.[4] As of her retirement, in 1944, she was teaching in Moose Pass, Alaska.[1]
Engen, Ione, Ardis German, and Julie Skule. Orah Dee Clark, Pioneer Teacher in Alaska: A Biographical Sketch. Committee on Pioneer Women and Research (1957).