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Victor
Fischer - Delegate, Alaska Constitutional Convention
Victor Fischer was a delegate to the Alaska Constitutional Convention, after
which he served in the territorial House of Representatives and the Alaska
State Senate. He was born in 1924 in Berlin, Germany, of an American father
and Russian mother. Fischer has degrees from Wisconsin, MIT, and Harvard.
He held several planning positions after coming to Alaska in 1950. He was
a University of Alaska faculty member in Fairbanks and Anchorage, primarily
associated with the Institute of Social and Economic Research, including
ten years as director. His current ISER work covers local self-governance,
Alaska Native issues, and Alaska-Russia affairs. |
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George
Sundborg, Sr. - Delegate, Alaska Constitutional Convention
Sundborg began his career in journalism in 1938 as the city editor for
the Daily Washingtonian. Over the course of his career, Sundborg would
write for, edit, publish or own the Daily Alaskan Empire, Juneau Independent
and the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. In 1955, Sundborg was elected to a
Territory-at-Large seat for the Alaska Constitutional Convention. Sundborg
served on Ernest Gruening’s staff from 1951-53 while Gruening was
Territorial Governor and from 1959-68, when Gruening served in the US
Senate. Sundborg is the author of several books, including “Opportunity
in Alaska,” “Hail Columbia,” and “Facts About
Statehood for Alaska.” The US Department of the Interior presented
Sundborg with a Meritorious Service Citation in 1973. |
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Jack
B. Coghill - Delegate, Alaska Constitutional Convention
Jack Coghill served a term in the Territorial House of Representatives and
was elected to the Constitutional Convention. Following statehood, he served
in the First through Third and the Fourteenth through Sixteenth Legislatures
before his election as Lieutenant Governor in 1990. Coghill also served
on the Nenana School Board, and was the President of the Alaska School Board
Association. |
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Thomas
Stewart - Secretary, Alaska Constitutional Convention
Thomas Stewart served as the Assistant Attorney General for the Territory
of Alaska until 1954, when he was elected to the Territorial House of Representatives.
While in the House, Stewart played a key role in researching, drafting and
gaining passage of the bill authorizing the Constitutional Convention, where
he served as Secretary. In 1966, he was appointed to the Juneau Superior
Court, where he served until 1981. Since his retirement, he has continued
service to the Alaska Court System as a settlement judge and in other capacities. |
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George
Rogers - Consultant & Temporary Secretary, Alaska Constitutional
Convention
George Rogers received his academic training at the University of California,
Berkeley (B.A. 1942, M.A. 1943) and Harvard (M.P.A. 1948, Ph.D. 1950) followed
by visiting fellowships at Clare Hall and Scott Polar Research Institute,
Cambridge (1967-68) and the editorial staff of the Sorbonne's center for
northern studies (1964-78). He joined the office of Governor B. Frank Heintzleman
as an Economist in July of 1953 after working with the Department of the
Interior and the Division of Territories. He served as a consultant for
the Constitutional Convention, and in the early sixties drafted one of the
first comprehensive studies on the economic aspects of statehood with his
book "The Future Of Alaska; Economic Consequences Of Statehood." Rogers
went on to serve as a faculty member at the Institute of Social and Economic
Research at the University of Alaska Anchorage from 1961 to 1983. He has
published five books and numerous research monographs and articles and served
on seven National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council programs
and forty Alaskan, Canadian and national research boards and commissions.
The University of Alaska Anchorage awarded him an Honorary Doctorate in
Economics in 1986. |
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Katie
Hurley - Chief Clerk, Alaska Constitutional Convention
Katie Hurley served as an assistant to Governors Gruening and Egan, and
served a term in the State House of Representatives. She served as Chief
Clerk to the Constitutional Convention and was secretary of the State Senate.
Hurley was the first woman to win a statewide election when she was the
Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor in 1978. She has also served
as the Executive Director of the Alaska Commission on the Status of Women,
Chair of the Alaska State Commission on Human Rights and the President of
the State Board of Education. In 1995, UAS granted Hurley an Honorary Doctorate
of Laws in recognition of her service to Alaska. |
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Doris Ann Bartlett - Librarian, Alaska Constitutional Convention
D.A. Bartlett, the daughter of E.L. "Bob" Bartlett, served as the Librarian of the Alaska Constitutional Convention before becoming an English instructor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
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Neva
Egan
Neva Egan served as Alaska’s first lady from 1959-66 and 1970-74.
Mrs. Egan worked as a teacher in Wyoming before moving to Valdez to teach.
She had plans to stay only a year. One of the first people she met in Valdez
was William Egan, who she would marry several years later. Her husband would
go on to serve in the Territorial Legislature, preside over the Constitutional
Convention and be elected the first Governor of the State of Alaska. Governor
Egan holds the distinction of being the only governor to serve three terms.
Mrs. Egan is an accomplished pianist, and has performed the Alaska Flag
Song across the state. Her plans for a one-year stay have evolved into over
sixty years of service and residency in Alaska. |
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Walter
Hickel
Walter J. Hickel served as Governor of Alaska 1966-1969, 1990-1994, and
also as U.S. Secretary of the Interior, 1969-1970. Hickel teamed with
William Egan in 1979 to form Commonwealth North, a public policy forum.
Hickel was a founding member of the Northern Forum, where he continues
to serve as Secretary-General. Since WWII, Hickel has been a builder,
developer, civic leader, and was deeply involved in Alaska’s statehood
fight. In 1954, he was elected Republican National Committeeman and served
in that capacity for ten years. He was named Alaskan of the Year in 1969
and received an honorary doctorate from UAA in 1976. |
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Mike
Stepovich
Mike Stepovich served three terms in the Territorial Legislature and was
the last Territorial Governor of Alaska. |
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Grace
Schaible
Grace Schaible served as Alaska’s Attorney General from 1987-89,
a member of the University of Alaska Board of Regents from 1985-87, and
has continuously served as a Trustee of the University of Alaska Foundation
since 1982. A life-long Alaskan, she was educated in the Juneau public schools
and received her B.A. in History from the University of Alaska. She completed
graduate work at the George Washington University and received her law degree
from Yale University. |
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Sydney
Huntington
Born in 1915, Sidney Huntington grew up in the Koyukuk River country of
northern Alaska. Huntington served twenty years on the Alaska Board of Fish
and Game and the Alaska Board of Game. Huntington published his autobiography
“Shadows on the Koyukuk – An Alaskan Native’s Life Along
the River” in 1993. In 1980, Huntington was named the “Founding
Father” of the Galena school system. The Alaska Outdoor Council and
the Alaska State Legislature have recognized him as “Conservationist
of the Year.” In 1989, the University of Alaska Fairbanks awarded
Huntington an honorary degree of Doctor of Public Service. |
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Chancy
Croft
Chancy Croft was a member of the Alaska State House of Representatives from
1969-71, and the Alaska State Senate from 1971-78. During his tenure, he
served as President of the Senate and Chairman of the Pipeline Impact Committee.
He served on the Governor’s Commission on Workers’ Compensation
Reform in 1988 and is recognized throughout the state as an expert on workers’
compensation issues. Chancy Croft served as a member of the University of
Alaska Board of Regents from 1995-03, serving as the Chair of the Board
from 2001-02. |
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Brian
Rogers
Brian D. Rogers is principal consultant and chief financial officer for
Information Insights, a Fairbanks-based management and public policy consulting
firm, and currently serves as the Chair of the University of Alaska Board
of Regents. He earned his Master's degree in Public Administration from
the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He was a member
of the Alaska House of Representatives from 1979 to 1982, where he co-chaired
the Joint Committee on the Constitutional Convention. Rogers sponsored the
legislation creating the Alaska Statehood Commission and served as a member
of that commission from 1981 to 1983. |
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Lew
Williams, Jr.
Lew Williams, Jr. has been active in the Alaskan newspaper industry since
1946. He has served as the publisher of the Ketchikan Daily News, the Wrangell
Sentinel, the Sitka Sentinel and the Petersburg Press. In addition to publishing,
he has been active in civic affairs, serving as the mayor of Petersburg,
a member of the University of Alaska Board of Regents, a member of the Wrangell
School Board as well as terms on the Alaska Judicial Council and the Board
of Governors of the Alaska Bar Association. Lew Williams, Jr. was awarded
an honorary doctorate from the University of Alaska Southeast in 1981. |
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Walter
Parker
Parker moved to Alaska in 1946 following his service in the United
States Navy. Parker served as a researcher at the University of Alaska,
a member of the Greater Anchorage Area Borough Assembly, and the Commissioner
of Highways for the State of Alaska. Parker co-chaired the Joint Federal/State
Land Use Planning Commission for Alaska that provided the background to
Congress for the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA).
Following the Exxon Valdez spill, Parker chaired the Alaska Oil Spill
Commission that examined the causes of the disaster. Parker has also served
on the Arctic Research Commission and is currently a delegate from the
US to the Arctic Council.
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Marlene Johnson Johnson was one of the founding board members of the Sealaska Corporation, serving as its chair from 1982-92. Named Citizen of the Year by the AFN in 1995, Johnson has been active in the Huna Totem Corporation, the Tlingit and Haida Central Council, the Rural CAP and the UAF School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences Advisory Council.
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William Tobin
Tobin began his Alaska journalism career in 1956 as the Associated Press Correspondent in Juneau. Following stints in Maryland and Montana, Tobin returned to Alaska in 1963 to serve as Editor of the Anchorage Daily Times, where Robert Atwood described him as his “right hand man.” |
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Stephen
Haycox
Prof. Stephen Haycox, a Professor of History at the University of Alaska
Anchorage, is an American cultural historian specializing in the history
of the American West and Alaska. In 2002 the University of Alaska honored
him with the Edith R. Bullock Prize for Excellence, the system's highest
annual award, recognizing outstanding service to the university and state.
He received a Governor’s Humanities Award in 2003. Prof. Haycox has
published widely on Alaska history. His research specialties include the
history of Alaska Natives and the place of Alaska in the history of the
American West. He is particularly interested in the role of myth in popular
history. Since 1996 he has served on the board of the Alaska Humanities
Forum, Alaska's state humanities council. In 2001 he served on Alaska Governor
Tony Knowles' leadership summit on subsistence. He has been a member of
the editorial advisory board of the Alaska Historical Society journal, Alaska
History, since its founding, and was recognized as AHS’s “Historian
of the Year” in 2003. |
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Thomas
Morehouse
Thomas Morehouse is Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University
of Alaska Anchorage. He was a full-time faculty member at the Institute
of Social and Economic Research from 1967 to 1994. During three decades
of association with ISER, he has extensively studied Alaska government and
public policy, with special focus on Native governance issues. He has written
numerous books and articles on Alaska state and local government including
co-authoring “Alaska Politics and Government” with Dr. Gerald
McBeath. |
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Claus-M.
Naske
Claus-M. Naske, Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Alaska
Fairbanks, graduated from the UA in 1961 with a bachelor's in history and
political science. He joined the ranks of the faculty in 1969. He has been
the director of the UA Press since 1988 overseeing the production of scholarly
work on the North. As professor and director of the UA Press he has encouraged
the research and writing of many students and budding authors. He has authored
or co-authored a dozen books, including "Alaska: A History of the 49th
State," widely considered the standard work on the state. In numerous
articles he has recounted the economic and political development in Alaska
and the relationship between Alaska and the rest of the U.S. He's considered
one of the state's most prominent historians, known nationally and internationally
for his keen documentation of Alaska's development from a Russian outpost
to a U.S. Territory and ultimately statehood. |
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Not pictured: Mary Nordale |
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Photos by Nelson Photography |
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