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Untitled Document
| Name: |
Ralph E. Robertson |
| City: |
Juneau |
| District: |
6 |
| Occupation: |
Lawyer |
| Born: |
October 18, 1885 - Sioux City, Iowa |
| Death: |
February 28, 1961 - Seattle, Washington |
| Alaska Resident: |
1906 - 1960 |
| Convention Posts: |
- Member, Committee on Judiciary Branch
- Member, Committee on Resolutions and Recommendations
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Quote from the Constitutional Convention:
"Mr. President, I am a little resentful of my old friend, John Hellenthal,
accusing me of being a hypocrite but I have been accused of a good many things,
and I can take it. I explained to the Committee that my purpose was not to get
a right of a strike breaker. I was simply trying to protect the very right which,
if I correctly understood Mr. Hellenthal, he was quoting from Secretary Mitchell,
he said it was an inalienable American right. That is the right I am trying
to protect through this bill of rights. There is no hypocrisy about it whatsoever.
It would meet the very conditions that Mr. Londborg spoke about at Unalakleet.
There are hundreds of those conditions existing in Alaska, at least during the
seasonal work, where people are denied the right to work because the control
is in a union from the states and a person here in Alaska is not permitted to
join. Most all our boys, even when they get to be over 16, when they can work,
between the ages of l6 and 18, many times they are not permitted to join the
union. Now that is a denial of the right to work. I claim that is one of the
causes of our delinquency among our youth today, it is the labor unions preventing
our young men going out to work when they are well able to, and I submit to
you that this ought to be passed, and I hope it will."
-Delegate R.E. Robertson, Day 45 of the Constitutional Convention, speaking
on his proposed amendment to the Bill of Rights to include a "right to
work" clause. The amendment failed overwhelmingly. Delegate Robertson was
the only member of the convention not to sign the constitution. He left Fairbanks
the day before the signing ceremony, announcing his opposition to the document's
proposed ordination for the abolition of fish traps, lowering the voting age
to 19, future reapportionment of the legislature based on population, annual
meetings of the legislature and the absence of a "right to work" clause.
| Education: |
Omaha Commercial College, Michigan College of Mines, University
of Washington |
| Public Offices and Organizations: |
- Mayor, City of Juneau - 1920-23
- President, Juneau School Board - 1924-47
- Trustee, Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines (Univ. of
AK) - 1925-33
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