After marrying Dodge Morgan in 1958, she moved to Alaska in 1959.[3] She had a succession of journalism jobs, working as a writer for the Juneau Empire, the News-Miner, Jessen’s Weekly, the Los Angeles Times, National Geographic and the Tundra Times.[4] She worked for Inupiat artist and Tundra Times founder and editor Howard Rock under an Alicia Patterson Fellowship and wrote a book about Rock entitled Art and Eskimo Power.[4]
Morgan worked for the Tundra Times during the land claims movement, writing for the Times as well as doing monthly coverage of Native villages for Alaska Magazine which she did for a decade beginning in the 1970s.[1][5] She was assigned to visit every Alaska village which was named in the Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement and visited 207 out of 220.[6]
Her book Good Time Girls of the Alaska-Yukon Gold Rush detailing the experiences of sex workers in Alaskan boomtowns of the era, made the Los Angeles Times’ Best Nonfiction list in 1999 and got her named Alaska Historian of the Year.[1][6] She co-founded Epicenter Press with business partner Kent Sturgis in 1988, a regional publishing house in Fairbanks publishing books about local people and lore.[1] She worked at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks in their Department of Journalism, teaching writing and photography.[1] She moved back to Maine in 1999 and was managing editor and publisher of the Casco Bay Weekly in Portland, Maine.[7]