Metro

Stress, isolation blamed for suicide cluster rocking Ivy League campus

Taylor Gilpin Wallace hanged himself at 18.Facebook

At 18, Taylor Gilpin Wallace seemed to have the world on a string.

Handsome and athletic, he’d been a track star, a football star, National Honor Society president and valedictorian at his high school in tiny Brookfield, Missouri.

And he was accepted at Columbia University.

“He had his entire life mapped out in front of him,” his mother, Angie, told The Post.

“He wanted to be a heart surgeon and do whatever it took to get there.”

But two months after moving into his single-bed dorm room, Wallace quit school, returned home to Missouri, and hanged himself in his basement.

Wallace became the second of the school’s stunning five students to commit suicide since the semester began in September. Two others died of apparent drug overdoses.

The student deaths include three from last month alone, one of them an exchange student from Japan who leaped from a seventh-floor dorm window.

The four other suicides happened once each month from September through December, and include a literature student from Morocco, a 21-year-old budding journalist and a 29-year-old Navy veteran.

“You have a child who comes from Middle America,” Angie Wallace said.

“He was surrounded by kids who had a social life, and he just didn’t connect with the kids. He was popular at home, but not at Columbia.”

“And it was the pressure of school,” the mom said, echoing a common theme among students who spoke to The Post.

Nearly every Columbia student The Post interviewed during repeated visits to the Morningside Heights campus said that relentless academic stress and a failure of the school to proactively address student mental health has contributed to the tragedies.

“It’s all coming at you at once,” said freshman Isabel Weil, 18.

“This is such a good school and everybody here has earned getting in — they’re all very smart,” she said.

Then “You realize as these deaths are happening … that maybe some people maybe feel it more than you do.”

The fall semester’s deaths came at a steady pace, as if in a dirge with a monthly drumbeat.

Police at the scene where a woman apparently jumped from an off-campus Columbia dorm.Christopher Sadowski

The first was on Sept. 6. Uriel Florez, 29, shot himself with a shotgun in his Nutley, NJ, home — 10 minutes before his mother returned home from work.

A Navy veteran who served as a medic in Iraq and Afghanistan, Florez had left behind two dozen handwritten suicide notes, said his sister, Natalie Candela, 43.

Depression and PTSD had taken a heavy toll, she said.

Then there was the stress of Columbia — though Candela did not believe her brother had reached out to counselors there, or anywhere.

“He was an A student” at his first school, Bergen Community College, “but at Columbia he was not,” Candela said.

“I know he was disappointed; it’s different to be competing at the town level than at the Olympic level.”

The second suicide came Oct. 27, when Wallace took his life in the basement of his parents’ home in Missouri.

Nicole OrttungFacebook

The third was on Nov. 22, when Nicole Katherine Orttung, 21, of Arlington, Virginia, killed herself during a visit home from school.

Orttung was already a promising journalist.

Writing for the Columbia Spectator and the Christian Science Monitor — where she published some 100 articles — she strived to right social injustices.

She wrote frequently about the public schools near Columbia’s campus, where, according to her obituary, she also volunteered.

The fourth suicide was on Dec. 18, when Mounia Abousaid — a senior literature major from Morocco — was found dead inside her eighth-floor dorm room at the Broadway Residence Hall at Broadway and West 114th Street.

A plastic bag was around her head, and she may have been dead for several days, according to police and student sources.

The fifth suicide came Jan. 18, when Yi-Chia “Mia” Chen, an exchange student from Waseda University in Japan, jumped from the seventh floor of her dorm at Broadway and 113th Street.

Police sources say that the sixth and seventh deaths are assumed drug ODs — narcotics paraphernalia was recovered at both scenes, sources said, though confirmatory toxicology results are still pending.

Mounia AbousaidFacebook

On Jan. 21, Ezekiel “Zeke” Reiser, 21, was found dead in the West 87th Street apartment he shared with his parents, Columbia adjunct faculty members Nanako Umemoto and Jesse Reiser.

And on Jan. 23, first-year student Daniel Andreotti, 20, of Ames, Iowa, was found dead inside his dorm in Hartley Hall at Amsterdam Avenue and West 115th Street.

Though many lived within a block of each other, there is no indication that any of the students knew each other.

“He didn’t leave his room very much,” Wallace’s mother said.

Despite repeated inquiries by The Post on Wednesday and Thursday, the administration at Columbia declined to answer questions about the past semester’s alarming number of student deaths.

But clearly, the administration is grappling with the tragedies.

As students died over the course of five months, Dean James Valentini, vice president for undergraduate education, had issued carefully worded condolence emails on the lost students.

The emails largely avoided the words “suicide” and “drugs,” and each featured similar boilerplate lists of counseling resources.

But on Thursday, when The Post broke details of the deaths online, the school was the one asking for help.

“As individuals and a community we come together to ask — really to insist — on understanding what more we can do to address the depression and addiction that is so often the cause of these losses,” the school’s vice president for university life, Suzanne Goldberg, wrote in a mass email to students.

Freshman Daniel Andreotti was found dead in his dorm room on Jan. 23.Facebook

Goldberg’s email included five pages detailing “what we have, and, after this, what more we will do.”

The new resources included a spring semester “Mental Health Week,” additional on-campus crisis intervention training for students and community members, and, as recently requested by student leaders, more space and funding for community-building “activities.”

Wallace’s grades were excellent — he got 100 percent on a chemistry test, the only one among some 300 students in the class to do so.

But in hour-long, nightly Facetime calls from his lonely dorm room, the teen would pour out his heart to his mother, describing his feelings of isolation and inferiority.

In one call, he told her, “You don’t know how badly I want to jump out that window right now.”

The mother had told the head of Columbia’s Counseling and Psychological Services Office that her son suffered depression, and hung the office’s card up in Wallace’s dorm.

But she believes he never reached out to school counselors, nor they to him, she told The Post.

“I definitely feel there’s more that should have been done,” she said.

On the day of his suicide, Wallace and his family visited another college, Truman State University, an hour’s drive north in Kirksville, Missouri.

Taylor Gilpin WallaceFacebook

He told his family he’d re-enroll there.

That night, Wallace played catch with his 15-year-old brother in the front yard, took a nap in the living room, then, as his mother made dinner, he went down into the basement, saying he needed to charge his cellphone.

When she called down to him to come up to eat, he said he wasn’t hungry.

Thirty minutes later, his dad was getting ready to go to Walmart, and went downstairs to get his son.

“He flipped on the light and Taylor was hanging,” the mother told The Post.

Wallace’s kid brother ran down and cut the belt. They performed CPR, and felt a weak pulse, but Wallace died at the hospital.

The family has set up the Taylor Gilpin Wallace Foundation for Suicide Prevention, in hopes of raising awareness and helping prevent future tragedies.

“He’s never really experienced failure,” the mom said.

“And he was so afraid of failing.”

Additional reporting by Stephanie Pagones and Jazmin Rosa