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Ermalee Hickel

Ermalee Hickel (September 11, 1925 – September 14, 2017) was an American public figure and philanthropist who served as the second and seventh First Lady of Alaska from 1966 to 1969 and again from 1990 to 1994.[1][2][3] She was the wife of the former Governor of Alaska Wally Hickel and one of the last members of Alaska's generation of pioneer political families.[1]

Ermalee Hickel
First Lady of Alaska
In role
December 3, 1990 – December 5, 1994
GovernorWally Hickel
Preceded byMichael Margaret Stewart
Succeeded bySusan Knowles
In role
December 5, 1966 – January 29, 1969
GovernorWally Hickel
Preceded byNeva Egan
Succeeded byDiana Miller
Personal details
Born
Ermalee Strutz

(1925-09-11)September 11, 1925
Anchorage, Territory of Alaska, U.S.
DiedSeptember 14, 2017(2017-09-14) (aged 92)
Anchorage, Alaska, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
(m. 1945; died 2010)
Children6

Biography edit

Early life edit

Hickel, the youngest of six children, was born Ermalee Strutz in Anchorage, Alaska, on September 11, 1925, to Aline and Louis Strutz.[1][4] Her family, who had arrived as pioneers in Anchorage in 1917, settled in a small cottage-style house located at Ninth Avenue and P Street near the Cook Inlet.[5][3] The home still stands, as of 2017.[3] The family raised cows on a piece of nearby land now known as the Delaney Park Strip.[3] Hickel's father, a United States Army sergeant, had been stationed in Alaska.[1] Her family was also affiliated with the now defunct National Bank of Alaska.[1]

Strutz was the editor of her high school newspaper, as well as an usher in the Fourth Avenue Theatre.[5] She later found work at the Port of Anchorage's seafood cannery before becoming a secretary at Fort Richardson, which is now part of Elmendorf Air Force Base, during the early 1940s.[1][5]

Ermalee Strutz met her future husband, Wally Hickel, soon after the sudden death of his first wife, Janice, from an infection in 1943.[1] Wally Hickel had married Janice Cannon in 1941.[3] Janice Hickel had been friends with Ermalee Strutz.[5] Hickel, now a widower with a baby son, remembered that his late wife had praised Strutz.[1] By coincidence, both worked at Fort Richardson, where she was a typist and secretary and he was an aircraft inspector.[3] Wally Hickel soon met her on Fort Richardson.[1][5][3] The couple married on Thanksgiving on November 22, 1945, in a Catholic wedding ceremony held at Holy Family Church, located on the site of the present-day Holy Family Old Cathedral.[1] In addition to Hickel's son, Ted, from his first marriage, the couple had five more sons.[1] They eventually settled in Anchorage's Turnagain neighborhood near Fish Creek.[3]

The Hickels purchased and renovated a small house soon after their wedding.[3] They later sold the home, which launched Wally Hickel's entry into the real estate business. He utilized the profits from the sale of the home to purchase, flip, and sell three more homes in Anchorage's Spenard neighborhood.[3]

Public career edit

Ermalee Hickel became actively involved in Alaskan politics once her husband entered the political arena in the 1950s.[4] Political observers have credited Ermalee Hickel with helping to launch her husband's political career and the couple viewed their business and political ventures as a partnership.[3] Wally Hickel had dyslexia, so Ermalee recorded his dictations on her typewriter and helped him with his speeches.[3] Throughout their public service careers, Ermalee Hickel's calm demeanor was seen as a counterbalance to Wally Hickel's more impulsive personality.[3] The former governor later described his wife as "beautiful as a butterfly, but tough as a boot."

In 1964, Ermalee and Wally Hickel began construction on their Hotel Captain Cook. She did the hotel's interior design and remained active in staffing decisions through the 1980s.[3] During the mid-1960s, Ermalee Hickel also co-founded a charity that later became Catholic Social Services.[3]

First Lady of Alaska edit

Wally Hickel, a Republican, was elected the second Governor of Alaska in 1966, narrowly defeating incumbent Governor Bill Egan. The election of her husband made Hickel the second First Lady in the state's short history.[3] Hickel, who was raising six sons at the time, stuck largely to ceremonial roles during her first tenure as Alaska's first lady from 1966 to 1969.[3] She hosted dignitaries, including aviator Charles Lindbergh, whose pants she ironed shortly before his address to the Alaska Legislature.[3] The Hickels left office in 1969 when Gov. Hickel was confirmed as United States Secretary of the Interior.[3] Nixon fired Hickel less than a year later after the Secretary criticized his Vietnam War policy.[3] Ermalee Hickel later hosted Nixon during his trip to Alaska in 1971, despite the firing.[5]

By contrast, Ermalee Hickel took a much more active role during her second tenure as First Lady from 1990 to 1994 by focusing on social issues.[3] Her public causes and initiatives included preventative healthcare, substance abuse and suicide prevention, homelessness, addiction recovery and rehabilitation, as well as the issues affecting young people and the elderly in the state.[4][3]

Hickel traveled extensively throughout Alaska as first lady.[3] She was known to eat lunch with inmates at juvenile detention facilities and Alaska Pioneer Homes for the elderly, as well as soup kitchens in Juneau, the state capitol.[3] She would then reports problems or other issues to the Governor or his staff in the governor's office.[3]

Notably, Hickel persuaded the governor to support the Alaska Permanent Fund dividend after traveling and hearing, first hand, how many Alaskans relied on the program.[3] Governor Hickel had initially opposed the dividend before his wife's intervention.[3]

First Lady Hickel lobbied to successfully enact new benefits for families to care for disabled children or adults living at home.[3] She also worked to raise the public's awareness of alcoholism and fetal alcoholism.[3] A literacy advocate, Hickel always carried a copy of Dr. Seuss' "Are You My Mother?" when invited to read with elementary school students.[3]

Later life edit

A philanthropist, Hickel and her husband jointly established the Walter J. and Ermalee Hickel Alaska Foundation as a fund within the Alaska Community Foundation.[1] She also created the Hickel House at Providence Alaska Medical Center, which provides accommodations for outpatients and their families.[1] Additionally, Hickel was a member of the boards of directors or patron of numerous civic, cultural, and political organizations, including the Pioneers of Alaska, the Alaska SeaLife Center, the President's Forum at Alaska Pacific University, the Anchorage Symphony League, the Knights and Ladies of the Holy Sepulcher, the Alaska Republican Women's Club, the Women's Resource Center, the Salvation Army, and the Alaska Botanical Garden.[4]

Hickel and five other former Alaskan first ladies were the subjects of a 2005 KTOO-TV television documentary.[6] In August 2008, then-Governor Sarah Palin honored Ermalee Hickel, as well as former first ladies Neva Egan, Bella Hammond, Susan Knowles and Nancy Murkowski, at an official ceremony and luncheon to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Alaskan statehood.[7] In a 2012 interview, Ermalee Hickel discussed her involvement in Alaska politics for the documentary, Alaska, the World and Walter Hickel (2013).[5]

During the 2012 Alaska state elections, Ermalee Hickel re-entered active politics by endorsing a bipartisan slate of lawmakers running for re-election to the Alaska Senate.[8] Hickel and former Alaska First Lady Bella Hammond partnered to re-establish Backbone Alaska, a political group which had originally been established in 1999 by former governors Wally Hickel and Jay Hammond to oppose perceived oil company concessions by then-Governor Tony Knowles' administration during the merger of BP and ARCO.[8] Bella Hammond's and Ermalee Hickel's newly resurrected Backbone Alaska also sought to counter the influence of the oil industry in Alaskan politics. The former First Ladies supported the Alaska Senate's Bipartisan Working Group, which had criticized oil tax reform and concessions to oil companies operating in Alaska between 2010 and 2012.[8] In an October 2012 press release in support of bipartisan efforts in the Alaska Senate, Hickel and Hammond stated, "As our husbands were known for putting Alaska first, we, too, are dedicated to this guiding principal. Now, multi-national corporations are attacking those Alaska legislators running for re-election who stood together in the past session to protect Alaska's interests."[8] Hammond and Hickel jointly endorsed several members of the Bipartisan Working Group who were running for re-election in 2012, including state Senators Hollis French, Joe Paskvan, Joe Thomas, and Bill Wielechowski.[8] The first ladies' support for the Bipartisan Working Group was backed by other prominent Alaskan political figures, including Vic Fischer.[9]

Hickel's husband of 65 years, former Governor Wally Hickel, died on May 7, 2010, at the age of 90.[10] Ermalee Hickel died at home in Anchorage on September 14, 2017, at the age of 92.[1][4] She was survived by her six sons and their wives, as well as sixteen grandchildren and great-grandchildren.[4] In a statement marking her death, Alaska Governor Bill Walker praised her contributions to the state, calling her "a giant of history."[11] Her memorial service was held at Our Lady of Guadalupe Co-Cathedral in Anchorage on October 18, 2017.[4]

Hickel was buried beside her husband in Anchorage Memorial Park.[2] Like her husband, the former first lady was buried standing up facing Washington, D.C.[2] In 2010, Governor Wally Hickel had famously requested to also be buried standing up in the direction of the U.S. capital.[2] According to their son, Jack, the Hickels had requested the unusual burial arrangement, recalling "He [Governor Hickel] said if they don't do it right he's going to crawl out of his grave and straighten them out...He thought they were going to screw everything up. He wanted to keep his eye on them."[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Downing, Suzanne (2017-09-15). "Ermalee Hickel, 1925-2017". Must Read Alaska. from the original on 2017-10-26. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  2. ^ a b c d e Andrews, Laurel (2017-09-15). "Ermalee Hickel, former first lady of Alaska, dies at 92". Alaska Dispatch News. from the original on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Wohlforth, Charles (2017-09-15). "Ermalee Hickel led Alaska, too". Alaska Dispatch News. from the original on 2017-09-16. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Ermalee Hickel (1925 - 2017) obituary". Alaska Dispatch News. 2017-10-01. from the original on 2017-11-11. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g . KTVA. 2017-09-15. Archived from the original on 2017-11-11. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  6. ^ Petty, Andrew (2005-06-22). "Alaska's first ladies gather for documentary". Juneau Empire. from the original on 2015-12-03. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  7. ^ Morrison, Eric (2008-08-04). "Palin family honors former first ladies: Women look back on fond memories of life in Governor's Mansion". Juneau Empire. from the original on 2010-12-17. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  8. ^ a b c d e Medred, Craig (2012-10-30). "Former first ladies of Alaska line up behind Senate bipartisan gang". Alaska Dispatch News. from the original on 2017-11-11. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  9. ^ DeMarban, Alex (2012-11-02). "Vic Fischer calls governor and allies 'lackeys', endorses Paskvan, Thomas and bipartisan group". Alaska Dispatch News. from the original on 2017-11-11. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  10. ^ Cockerham, Sean (2010-05-08). "Alaska's Walter Hickel, who Nixon fired over Vietnam, dies". The McClatchy Company (Anchorage Daily News). Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  11. ^ "Governor Walker Lowers Alaska Flags in Honor of Former First Lady Ermalee Hickel". Office of the Governor of Alaska. 2017-09-15. from the original on 2017-09-30. Retrieved 2017-11-10.


ermalee, hickel, september, 1925, september, 2017, american, public, figure, philanthropist, served, second, seventh, first, lady, alaska, from, 1966, 1969, again, from, 1990, 1994, wife, former, governor, alaska, wally, hickel, last, members, alaska, generati. Ermalee Hickel September 11 1925 September 14 2017 was an American public figure and philanthropist who served as the second and seventh First Lady of Alaska from 1966 to 1969 and again from 1990 to 1994 1 2 3 She was the wife of the former Governor of Alaska Wally Hickel and one of the last members of Alaska s generation of pioneer political families 1 Ermalee HickelFirst Lady of AlaskaIn role December 3 1990 December 5 1994GovernorWally HickelPreceded byMichael Margaret StewartSucceeded bySusan KnowlesIn role December 5 1966 January 29 1969GovernorWally HickelPreceded byNeva EganSucceeded byDiana MillerPersonal detailsBornErmalee Strutz 1925 09 11 September 11 1925Anchorage Territory of Alaska U S DiedSeptember 14 2017 2017 09 14 aged 92 Anchorage Alaska U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseWally Hickel m 1945 died 2010 wbr Children6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Public career 1 3 First Lady of Alaska 1 4 Later life 2 See also 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Hickel the youngest of six children was born Ermalee Strutz in Anchorage Alaska on September 11 1925 to Aline and Louis Strutz 1 4 Her family who had arrived as pioneers in Anchorage in 1917 settled in a small cottage style house located at Ninth Avenue and P Street near the Cook Inlet 5 3 The home still stands as of 2017 3 The family raised cows on a piece of nearby land now known as the Delaney Park Strip 3 Hickel s father a United States Army sergeant had been stationed in Alaska 1 Her family was also affiliated with the now defunct National Bank of Alaska 1 Strutz was the editor of her high school newspaper as well as an usher in the Fourth Avenue Theatre 5 She later found work at the Port of Anchorage s seafood cannery before becoming a secretary at Fort Richardson which is now part of Elmendorf Air Force Base during the early 1940s 1 5 Ermalee Strutz met her future husband Wally Hickel soon after the sudden death of his first wife Janice from an infection in 1943 1 Wally Hickel had married Janice Cannon in 1941 3 Janice Hickel had been friends with Ermalee Strutz 5 Hickel now a widower with a baby son remembered that his late wife had praised Strutz 1 By coincidence both worked at Fort Richardson where she was a typist and secretary and he was an aircraft inspector 3 Wally Hickel soon met her on Fort Richardson 1 5 3 The couple married on Thanksgiving on November 22 1945 in a Catholic wedding ceremony held at Holy Family Church located on the site of the present day Holy Family Old Cathedral 1 In addition to Hickel s son Ted from his first marriage the couple had five more sons 1 They eventually settled in Anchorage s Turnagain neighborhood near Fish Creek 3 The Hickels purchased and renovated a small house soon after their wedding 3 They later sold the home which launched Wally Hickel s entry into the real estate business He utilized the profits from the sale of the home to purchase flip and sell three more homes in Anchorage s Spenard neighborhood 3 Public career edit Ermalee Hickel became actively involved in Alaskan politics once her husband entered the political arena in the 1950s 4 Political observers have credited Ermalee Hickel with helping to launch her husband s political career and the couple viewed their business and political ventures as a partnership 3 Wally Hickel had dyslexia so Ermalee recorded his dictations on her typewriter and helped him with his speeches 3 Throughout their public service careers Ermalee Hickel s calm demeanor was seen as a counterbalance to Wally Hickel s more impulsive personality 3 The former governor later described his wife as beautiful as a butterfly but tough as a boot In 1964 Ermalee and Wally Hickel began construction on their Hotel Captain Cook She did the hotel s interior design and remained active in staffing decisions through the 1980s 3 During the mid 1960s Ermalee Hickel also co founded a charity that later became Catholic Social Services 3 First Lady of Alaska edit Wally Hickel a Republican was elected the second Governor of Alaska in 1966 narrowly defeating incumbent Governor Bill Egan The election of her husband made Hickel the second First Lady in the state s short history 3 Hickel who was raising six sons at the time stuck largely to ceremonial roles during her first tenure as Alaska s first lady from 1966 to 1969 3 She hosted dignitaries including aviator Charles Lindbergh whose pants she ironed shortly before his address to the Alaska Legislature 3 The Hickels left office in 1969 when Gov Hickel was confirmed as United States Secretary of the Interior 3 Nixon fired Hickel less than a year later after the Secretary criticized his Vietnam War policy 3 Ermalee Hickel later hosted Nixon during his trip to Alaska in 1971 despite the firing 5 By contrast Ermalee Hickel took a much more active role during her second tenure as First Lady from 1990 to 1994 by focusing on social issues 3 Her public causes and initiatives included preventative healthcare substance abuse and suicide prevention homelessness addiction recovery and rehabilitation as well as the issues affecting young people and the elderly in the state 4 3 Hickel traveled extensively throughout Alaska as first lady 3 She was known to eat lunch with inmates at juvenile detention facilities and Alaska Pioneer Homes for the elderly as well as soup kitchens in Juneau the state capitol 3 She would then reports problems or other issues to the Governor or his staff in the governor s office 3 Notably Hickel persuaded the governor to support the Alaska Permanent Fund dividend after traveling and hearing first hand how many Alaskans relied on the program 3 Governor Hickel had initially opposed the dividend before his wife s intervention 3 First Lady Hickel lobbied to successfully enact new benefits for families to care for disabled children or adults living at home 3 She also worked to raise the public s awareness of alcoholism and fetal alcoholism 3 A literacy advocate Hickel always carried a copy of Dr Seuss Are You My Mother when invited to read with elementary school students 3 Later life edit A philanthropist Hickel and her husband jointly established the Walter J and Ermalee Hickel Alaska Foundation as a fund within the Alaska Community Foundation 1 She also created the Hickel House at Providence Alaska Medical Center which provides accommodations for outpatients and their families 1 Additionally Hickel was a member of the boards of directors or patron of numerous civic cultural and political organizations including the Pioneers of Alaska the Alaska SeaLife Center the President s Forum at Alaska Pacific University the Anchorage Symphony League the Knights and Ladies of the Holy Sepulcher the Alaska Republican Women s Club the Women s Resource Center the Salvation Army and the Alaska Botanical Garden 4 Hickel and five other former Alaskan first ladies were the subjects of a 2005 KTOO TV television documentary 6 In August 2008 then Governor Sarah Palin honored Ermalee Hickel as well as former first ladies Neva Egan Bella Hammond Susan Knowles and Nancy Murkowski at an official ceremony and luncheon to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Alaskan statehood 7 In a 2012 interview Ermalee Hickel discussed her involvement in Alaska politics for the documentary Alaska the World and Walter Hickel 2013 5 During the 2012 Alaska state elections Ermalee Hickel re entered active politics by endorsing a bipartisan slate of lawmakers running for re election to the Alaska Senate 8 Hickel and former Alaska First Lady Bella Hammond partnered to re establish Backbone Alaska a political group which had originally been established in 1999 by former governors Wally Hickel and Jay Hammond to oppose perceived oil company concessions by then Governor Tony Knowles administration during the merger of BP and ARCO 8 Bella Hammond s and Ermalee Hickel s newly resurrected Backbone Alaska also sought to counter the influence of the oil industry in Alaskan politics The former First Ladies supported the Alaska Senate s Bipartisan Working Group which had criticized oil tax reform and concessions to oil companies operating in Alaska between 2010 and 2012 8 In an October 2012 press release in support of bipartisan efforts in the Alaska Senate Hickel and Hammond stated As our husbands were known for putting Alaska first we too are dedicated to this guiding principal Now multi national corporations are attacking those Alaska legislators running for re election who stood together in the past session to protect Alaska s interests 8 Hammond and Hickel jointly endorsed several members of the Bipartisan Working Group who were running for re election in 2012 including state Senators Hollis French Joe Paskvan Joe Thomas and Bill Wielechowski 8 The first ladies support for the Bipartisan Working Group was backed by other prominent Alaskan political figures including Vic Fischer 9 Hickel s husband of 65 years former Governor Wally Hickel died on May 7 2010 at the age of 90 10 Ermalee Hickel died at home in Anchorage on September 14 2017 at the age of 92 1 4 She was survived by her six sons and their wives as well as sixteen grandchildren and great grandchildren 4 In a statement marking her death Alaska Governor Bill Walker praised her contributions to the state calling her a giant of history 11 Her memorial service was held at Our Lady of Guadalupe Co Cathedral in Anchorage on October 18 2017 4 Hickel was buried beside her husband in Anchorage Memorial Park 2 Like her husband the former first lady was buried standing up facing Washington D C 2 In 2010 Governor Wally Hickel had famously requested to also be buried standing up in the direction of the U S capital 2 According to their son Jack the Hickels had requested the unusual burial arrangement recalling He Governor Hickel said if they don t do it right he s going to crawl out of his grave and straighten them out He thought they were going to screw everything up He wanted to keep his eye on them 2 See also edit nbsp Alaska portal nbsp Biography portal Wally Hickel Jack HickelReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Downing Suzanne 2017 09 15 Ermalee Hickel 1925 2017 Must Read Alaska Archived from the original on 2017 10 26 Retrieved 2017 11 10 a b c d e Andrews Laurel 2017 09 15 Ermalee Hickel former first lady of Alaska dies at 92 Alaska Dispatch News Archived from the original on 2017 11 07 Retrieved 2017 11 10 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Wohlforth Charles 2017 09 15 Ermalee Hickel led Alaska too Alaska Dispatch News Archived from the original on 2017 09 16 Retrieved 2017 11 11 a b c d e f g Ermalee Hickel 1925 2017 obituary Alaska Dispatch News 2017 10 01 Archived from the original on 2017 11 11 Retrieved 2017 11 10 a b c d e f g Former first lady Ermalee Hickel dies at 92 KTVA 2017 09 15 Archived from the original on 2017 11 11 Retrieved 2017 11 10 Petty Andrew 2005 06 22 Alaska s first ladies gather for documentary Juneau Empire Archived from the original on 2015 12 03 Retrieved 2017 11 10 Morrison Eric 2008 08 04 Palin family honors former first ladies Women look back on fond memories of life in Governor s Mansion Juneau Empire Archived from the original on 2010 12 17 Retrieved 2017 11 10 a b c d e Medred Craig 2012 10 30 Former first ladies of Alaska line up behind Senate bipartisan gang Alaska Dispatch News Archived from the original on 2017 11 11 Retrieved 2017 11 11 DeMarban Alex 2012 11 02 Vic Fischer calls governor and allies lackeys endorses Paskvan Thomas and bipartisan group Alaska Dispatch News Archived from the original on 2017 11 11 Retrieved 2017 11 11 Cockerham Sean 2010 05 08 Alaska s Walter Hickel who Nixon fired over Vietnam dies The McClatchy Company Anchorage Daily News Retrieved 2017 11 11 Governor Walker Lowers Alaska Flags in Honor of Former First Lady Ermalee Hickel Office of the Governor of Alaska 2017 09 15 Archived from the original on 2017 09 30 Retrieved 2017 11 10 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ermalee Hickel amp oldid 1213633901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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