Alaska Women's Hall of Fame

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Alaska Women's Hall of Fame (AWHF) recognizes women natives or residents of the U.S. state of Alaska for their significant achievements or statewide contributions. It was conceived by the board of directors of the Alaska Women's Network (AWN) in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Alaska's statehood. The large inaugural class of fifty women were inducted weeks after that anniversary, on March 6, 2009, with subsequent classes inducted every year since. As of the class of 2015, 135 women and one organization, the Sisters of Providence,[1] have been honored.[2] The principal organizations involved with the AWHF are the Zonta Club of Anchorage, the YWCA, Alaska Women for Political Action, the Anchorage Women's Commission, the University of Alaska Anchorage, Alaska Women's Network and the ATHENA Society.[3]

Inductees

Alaska Women's Hall of Fame
Name Image Birth and
death years
Class
year
Area of achievement
Audrey Aanes 1944 – 2012 Advocate for the physically disabled[4]
Elaine Abraham 1929 – 2016 2011 First registered nurse from the Tlingit people.[5]
Alberta Daisy Schenck Adams 1928 – 2009 2010 Civil rights activist of the Iñupiat, whose 1944 challenge of Alaska's segregation policies was a factor in the passage of Alaska's 1945 Anti-Discrimination Bill.[6]
Eleanor Andrews 1944 – 2014 Civic entrepreneur[7]
Changunak Antisarlook Andrewuk
(Sinrock Mary)
1870 – 1948 2009 Of Iñupiaq and Russian ancestry, known as the Queen of the Reindeer, became the owner of the largest reindeer herd in Alaska after challenging Alaska's laws that disqualified women from owning property[8]
Jane Ruth Angvik 1948 – 2014 Former Anchorage Assemblywoman and member of the Anchorage Charter Commission[7]
Evangeline Atwood 1906 – 1987 2009 Author, historian, president of Alaska Statehood Association.[9] Wife of Robert Atwood and sister of Elmer E. Rasmuson.
Arne (Buckley) Beltz 1917 – 2013 2013 Public health nurse.[10] Second wife of Bill Beltz, the first president of the Alaska Senate following statehood. The building housing the Anchorage municipal health department (the original location of what is now Alaska Regional Hospital) is named for her.
Laura Mae (Beltz) Bergt 1940 – 1984 2015 Activist who pushed for the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.[11]
Gretchen T. Bersch 1944 – 2012 Adult education advocate[12]
Daisy Lee (Andersen) Bitter 1928 – 2015 Science educator[11]
Lydia Black 1925 – 2007 2009 Anthropologist[13]
Rita (Pitka) Blumenstein 1936 – 2009 Elder of the Yupik peoples, first state certified practitioner of traditional medicine[14]
Connie Boochever 1919 – 1999 2012 Patron of the arts.[15] Wife of Robert Boochever and grandmother of Hilary Lindh.
Judith "Judy" (King) Brady 1941 – 2013 Public policy director[10]
Alice Brown 1912 – 1973 2010 Champion of native rights who helped the passage of Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act[16]
Daphne Elizabeth Brown 1948 – 2011 2013 Architect[10]
Tikasuk "Emily" Brown (Ivanoff) 1904 – 1982 2009 Educator, chronicler of Iñupiaq cultural history[17]
Thelma Buchholdt 1934 – 2007 2009 Alaska House of Representatives, first Filipino American to serve in a U.S. state legislature[18]
Edith Bullock 1903 – 1994 2009 Freighting businesswoman in Nome and Kotzebue, Alaska Territorial House of Representatives, Alaska Territorial Senate[19]
Susan Butcher 100px 1954 – 2006 2009 Multi-year winner Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race[20]
Ellen "Nellie" Cashman 100px 1845 – 1925 2009 Yukon gold prospector, restauranteur, advocated against violence and against public hangings, caregiver to orphans[21]
Orah Dee Clark 1875 – 1965 2009 Educator, namesake of an Anchorage middle school[22]
L. Arlene "Buddy" Clay 1912 – 2015 Judge[11]
Carol Comeau 1941 – 2009 Superintendent Anchorage School District[23]
Carolyn Covington 1936 – 2013 Educator and advocate for women[10]
Katharine "Kit" Crittenden 1921 – 2010 2011 Urban beautification and historic preservation[24]
Marvel Crosson 1904 – 1929 2009 Aviator[25]
Betti Cuddy 1924 – 2010 2011 Member of the family which runs First National Bank Alaska, patron of the arts.[26] Mother of David Cuddy.
Lucy Evelyn (Huie Hon) Cuddy 1889 – 1982 2015 Anchorage civic leader[11]
Marie (Hanna) Darlin 1925 – 2015 Senior citizens' advocate[11]
Nora Marks Dauenhauer (Keixwnéi) Nora Dauenhauer.jpg 1927 – 2010 Documentarian of Tlingit culture.[27] Wife of Richard Dauenhauer.
Bettye J. Davis 1938 – 2010 Alaska Senate, Alaska House of Representatives[28]
Mahala Ashley Dickerson 1912 – 2007 2009 Pioneering lawyer and civil rights advocate, early homesteader in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley.[29] Mother of Chris Dickerson.
Beverly D. Dunham 1932 – 2014 Journalist and community advocate[7]
Neva Egan 1914 – 2011 2009 Alaska's first First Lady following statehood.[30] Wife of William Allen Egan and mother of Dennis Egan.
Dana Fabe 1951 – 2009 The first female associate justice as well as the first female chief justice of the Alaska Supreme Court[31]
Kay Fanning 1927 – 2000 2009 Publisher of the Anchorage Daily News, editor of the Christian Science Monitor.[32] Mother of Ted Field.
Dolly Farnsworth 1922 – 2014 2015 Soldotna community leader[11]
Mary Jane (Evans) Fate 1933 – 2014 Koyukon leader who lobbied for the Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement Act, co-chair of the Alaska Natives Commission[7]
Helen Fischer 1912 – 1986 2009 Alaska Constitutional Convention delegate, Alaska Territorial House of Representatives, Alaska House of Representatives[33]
Nan Elaine "Lanie" Fleischer 1928 – 2011 Community activist, was the primary advocate for establishing the Chester Creek trail system in Anchorage[34]
Carolyn Floyd 1933 – 2012 First president Kodiak Community College[35]
Lucy Frey 1932– 2009 Educator[36]
Nora Venes Guinn 1920 – 2005 2009 U.S. Commissioner, magistrate and District Court judge in Bethel, the first Alaska Native and first non-lawyer to be appointed to an Alaskan state judgeship[37]
Dorothy Awes Haaland 1918 – 1996 2009 Alaska Constitutional Convention delegate, Alaska Territorial House of Representatives, Alaska Assistant Attorney General[38]
Lorene Harrison 1905 – 2005 2009 Educator, community activist[39]
Cornelia Hatcher 1867 – 1953 2009 Suffragist, temperance advocate.[40] A national-level operative with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Cornelia Templeton Jewett visited Alaska in 1909, where she met and married Robert Lee Hatcher, the namesake of Hatcher Pass. Remaining in Alaska, she lobbied the newly formed territorial government for the right of women to vote, which was the first law passed by the territorial legislature, and for passage of the Bone Dry Law, which preceded and outlasted the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Hazel Heath 1909 – 1998 2010 Founder Pratt Museum, business owner, community activist, Republican Party worker, mayor of Homer[41]
Mildred Robinson Hermann 1891 – 1964 2009 Lawyer, Alaska Constitutional Convention delegate, Alaska Statehood Commission, newspaper and radio correspondent reporting on the territorial legislature.[42] In-law of Grover C. Winn.
Diddy R. M. (Seyd) Hitchins 1945 – 2013 International relations educator, political science professor at the University of Alaska Anchorage[10]
Shirley Holloway 1940 – 2010 Educator, Quality Schools Initiative[43]
Joerene Savikko Hout 1934 – 2011 From a longstanding Douglas family, influenced by childhood experiences at Tsimshian Indian village, became an advocate for health education and care for native peoples.[44]
Frances Howard 1944 – 2009 First female Alaska State Trooper[45]
Wilda G. "Burch" Hudson 1924 – 2012 2012 Anchorage City Council and Municipal Assembly, public service, volunteerism[46]
Karen L. (Lueck) Hunt 1938 – 2013 Judge and educator[10]
Celia Hunter 1919 – 2001 2009 Environmentalist, ecotourism[47]
Katie Hurley 1921 – 2009 Longtime aide to Ernest Gruening, Alaska Constitutional Convention staff, Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in 1978, Alaska House of Representatives[48]
Joan Hurst 1927 – 2003 2013 Youth advocate[10]
Sarah Agnes James 1946 – 2009 Gwich'in environmental activist opposes oil drilling on the Porcupine caribou habitat[49]
Ruth Jefford 1914 – 2007 2009 Aviator, Alaska's first female commercial air taxi operator, first female pilot licensed to teach at Merrill Field[50]
Katie John 1915 – 2013 2014 Ahtna elder and culture bearer who advocated for Native subsistence rights[7]
Marlene Johnson (Slath Jaa Klaa Lákooti) 1935 – 2010 Public service, advocate for the Tlingit people[51]
Alice Johnstone 1925 – 2015 Conservationist[11]
Carolyn E. Jones 1941 – 2012 Human rights advocate[52]
Dorothy M. (Knee) Jones 1923 – 2013 Anthropologist[10]
Jewel Jones 1943 – 2013 Public health and community development leader[10]
Mary Joyce c. 1899 – 1976 2013 Entrepreneur and adventurer[10]
Della Keats 1907 – 1986 2009 Iñupiaq traditional medicine healer[53]
Louise Kellogg 1903 – 2001 2012 Dairy farmer, philanthropist (particularly benefiting Alaska Pacific University), Women's Army Corps veteran[54]
Alice Dove (Montgomery) Kull 1897 – 1991 2015 Social worker[11]
V. Kay Lahdenpera 1936 – 2014 Public health nurse[7]
Thelma (Perse) Langdon 1925 – 2012 2013 Educator, advocate for mental health and elder care[10]
Janie Leask (Gyetm Wilgoosk) 1948 – 2014 Former president and CEO of the Alaska Federation of Natives[7]
Georgianna Lincoln 1943 – 2010 The first Alaska Native female to serve in the Alaska Senate[55]
Kay Muriel (Townsend) Linton 1933 – 2003 2014 Organizer and volunteer[7]
Ethel Lund (Aan Wugeex’) 1931 – 2010 Founded South East Alaska Regional Health Consortium; Jimmy Carter appointee to the President's Commission on Mental Health[56]
Wilda Marston 1930 – 2009 Educator, philanthropist[57]
Blanche McSmith 1920 – 2006 2009 First African American to serve in the Alaska Legislature[58]
Marie (Nick) Meade (Arnaq) 1947 – 2015 Yup'ik elder[11]
Leonie von Meusebach–Zesch 100px 1882 – 1944 2012 Early 20th century dentist.[59] Granddaughter of Texas pioneer John O. Meusebach[60]
Emily Morgan 1878 – 1960 2013 Public health nurse[10]
Lael Morgan 1936 – 2011 Author, historian, journalist, wrote biographies of Ray Mala and Tundra Times founder Howard Rock[61]
Lena Morrow Lewis 100px 1862 – 1950 2009 Journalist, Socialist Party of America leader[62]
Ruth E. Moulton 1931 – 2006 2013 Community activist and educator[10]
Marge Mullen 1920 – 2010 Early homesteader on the central Kenai Peninsula, historian and archivist for Kenai Peninsula College[63]
Rie Muñoz 1921 – 2015 2009 Bureau of Indian Affairs educator, artist who creates watercolors and prints of life in Alaska.[64] Mother-in-law of Cathy Muñoz.
Lisa Murkowski Lisa Murkowski.jpg 1957 – 2009 Alaska House of Representatives, United States Senate, won reelection to the Senate as a write-in candidate in 2010.[65] Daughter of Frank Murkowski and in-law of Arliss Sturgulewski.
Marie (Matsuno) Nash 1943 – 2013 Human rights advocate[10]
Sadie Neakok 1916 – 2004 2009 Longtime magistrate in Barrow, Iñupiaq Inuit rights advocate[66]
S. Anne Newell 1946 – 2013 Police officer and detective[10]
Jane Vallett Sutherland Niebergall 1931 – 2014 Rural education advocate[7]
Helen Nienhueser 1936 – 2010 Environmentalist[67]
Katherine Nordale 1902 – 1994 2009 Alaska Constitutional Convention delegate, postmaster of Juneau[68]
Ruth Elin Hall Ost 1886 – 1953 2011 Ran missions and children's homes; one of the founders of Elim.[69] Grandmother of Gail Phillips, the second (and most recent) female speaker of the Alaska House of Representatives (1997–1999).
Sarah Palin Sarah Palin by Gage Skidmore.jpg 1964 – 2009 Governor of Alaska, Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States, news commentator, author[70]
Ellen Evak Paneok 1959 – 2008 2012 Aviation[71]
Elizabeth Peratrovich 1911 – 1958 2009 Civil rights[72]
Leah Webster Peterson 1908 – 2007 2011 Pioneer educator on Kodiak Island.[73] In 1976, her home in downtown Anchorage became the site (and she became the namesake) of the Peterson Tower, an office/condominium highrise where she continued to reside.
Ramona Gail (McIver) Phillips 1944 – 2015 Alaska House speaker and majority leader[11]
Verna E. Pratt 1930 – 2014 Educator on native flora[7]
Sisters of Providence 2009 Established hospitals in Nome, Anchorage and Fairbanks[1]
Mary Louise Rasmuson Mary Louise Rasmuson.jpg 1911 – 2012 2009 Colonel in the Women's Army Corps; founded Anchorage Museum.[74] Wife of Elmer E. Rasmuson.
Sharon Richards 1941 – 2012 Community activist in non-profit organizations[75]
Martha M. Roderick 1931 – 2008 2011 Educator, president of Anchorage School Board.[76] Mother of Libby Roderick.
Irene Sparks Rowan 1941 – 2012 Leading advocate and organizer in Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act[77]
Lisa Howell Starr Rudd 1933 – 1985 2012 Alaska House of Representatives, sponsored bill to create Alaska Commission on the Status of Women, was serving as a member of the cabinet of Governor Bill Sheffield at the time of her death[78]
Susan L. Ruddy 1941 – 2012 Founded the Alaska chapter of the Nature Conservancy[79]
Irene Ryan 1909 – 1997 2009 Alaska State Senate, Territorial House of Representatives[80]
Grace Berg Schaible 1925 – 2009 First female Alaska Attorney General[81]
Ruth Anne Marie Schmidt 1916 – 2014 2015 Geologist[11]
Jo Ryman Scott 1929 – 2010 Educator,[82] founder and until 2009 director of the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival
Nell Scott ca. 1901 – ? 2009 Alaska Territorial House of Representatives, the first female to serve in the territorial legislature[83]
Lidia Selkregg 1920 – 1999 2009 Geologist who was a state planner on land use, Greater Anchorage Area Borough and Anchorage Municipal Assemblies[84]
Natalya Shelikof 1762 – ? 2009 First white woman to live in Alaska, cofounder of first government structure on Kodiak Island, helped bring the Russian Orthodox Church to Alaska.[85] Wife of Grigory Shelikhov.
Ann Mary (Cherrington) Stevens 1929 – 1978 2015 Community activist[11]
Barbara Sweetland Smith 1936 – 2013 2014 Russian scholar[7]
Hannah Paul Solomon 1908 – 2011 2012 Matriarchal elder of the Athabascan people; first female mayor of Fort Yukon.[86] Mother of Jonathan Solomon.
Arliss Sturgulewski 1927 – 2009 Alaska State Senate, twice Republican nominee for Governor.[87] In-law of Frank Murkowski and Lisa Murkowski.
Clare Swan 1931 – 2011 Advocate for Kenaitze Indian Tribe fishing rights[88]
Dora Sweeney 1907 – 2001 2009 Alaska Constitutional Convention delegate, territorial and state legislatures[89]
Francine Conat Lastufka Taylor 1937 – 2014 Advocate and preserver of Alaskan arts, history and culture[7]
Mary Taylor "Tay" Pryor Thomas 1927 – 2014 2010 Journalist, author.[90] Wife of Lowell Thomas, Jr..
Peg Tileston 1931 – 2010 Conservationist[91]
Elizabeth Ann "Betsy" Tower 1926 – 2010 2010 Public health physician, author, historian.[92] Wrote biographies of William Allen Egan, Michael James Heney and Austin E. Lathrop.
Fran Ulmer Fran Ulmer cropped.jpg 1947 – 2009 Mayor of Juneau, Alaska House of Representatives, Lieutenant Governor of Alaska, chancellor of the University of Alaska Anchorage; first female elected to statewide office in Alaska in 1994[93]
Pauline Utter 1942 – 2005 2012 Women's rights advocate[94]
Elvera Voth 1923 – 2015 Choral conductor[11]
Helen Stoddard Whaley 1924 – 1971 2011 Children's medicine and care[95]
Rosita Worl 1938 – 2012 Advocate for Alaska native cultures[96]
Ada Wien 1907 – 1984 2009 Staff to United States territorial court judge Gudbrand J. Lomen, delegate to Alaska Constitutional Convention.[97] Wife of Noel Wien, whom she assisted in building what became Wien Air Alaska.
Caroline Wohlforth 1932 – 2011 2011 Educator, influential in starting public broadcasting in Anchorage.[98] Mother of Charles Wohlforth, who himself has long been associated with Anchorage's public broadcasting outlets.
Patricia B. Wolf 1940– 2011 Museum director[99]
Gertrude M. Wolfe 1933 – 2007 2014 Community activist active in health care and education[7]
Virginia "Ginny" Hill Wood 1917 – 2013 2010 Conservationist, Alaska Conservation Foundation[100][101] Lifetime Achievement Award
Esther Wunnicke 1922 – 2013 2009 Land resources, native land rights, also served in Governor Sheffield's cabinet as commissioner of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources[102]

References

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External links