{"id":37999,"date":"2018-11-01T16:07:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-02T00:07:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-the-last-alaskan-first-governor\/"},"modified":"2018-11-01T16:07:00","modified_gmt":"2018-11-02T00:07:00","slug":"opinion-the-last-alaskan-first-governor","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-the-last-alaskan-first-governor\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: The last Alaskan first governor"},"content":{"rendered":"
Like only one other governor before him, Bill Walker embodied the true spirit of the last frontier. It’s why he believed that Alaskans working together would “make constructive changes” to “the traditional ways of doing business” and right our financial ship of state. That he couldn’t make it happen may be a collective failure originating in our greater attachment to the nation than to the place we call home.<\/span><\/p>\n Much of Walker’s inspiration comes from his memory of the 1964 earthquake. He wasn’t quite 13 years old when a massive tsunami leveled his hometown of Valdez. Of the 555 people who resided there, more than 30 died. As Walker tells it, “Alaskans pulled together to bury our loved ones, rebuild our communities and forge a path forward for our state.”<\/p>\n Another formative experience that helped implant a deep love for Alaska in Walker was the 1967 flood in Fairbanks. Using what he learned from the earthquake recovery, he drove almost 400 miles on gravel highways to bring aid to friends living there.<\/p>\n Bill Egan had a similar adversity-based attachment to this place. Born in Valdez in 1914, he graduated from high school there at the start of the Great Depression. In 1940, he won a seat in the Territorial House of Representatives. He was then chosen to lead the Alaska Constitutional Convention. “We love our great United States of America” he said at the time, adding “our hearts belong to our great Territory of Alaska, and we will never have true peace of mind until we are taken in full membership as one of the great states of the Union.”<\/p>\n Egan and Walker aren’t the only governors who knew Alaska as a territory and watched it rebuild from the earthquake. But they’re the only two born here. And if you take Alaska out of their identities, both might have difficulty recognizing themselves as Americans.<\/p>\n