6th Alaska State Legislature
The Sixth Alaska State Legislature served from January 1969 to January 1971.
Senate
District | Name | Party | Location |
---|---|---|---|
A | Robert H. Ziegler, Sr. | Democratic | Ketchikan |
B | Howard C. Bradshaw | Democratic | Sitka |
C | Elton E. Engstrom, Jr. | Republican | Juneau |
D | Jan M. Koslosky | Republican | Palmer |
E | Nicholas J. Begich | Democratic | Anchorage |
Joseph P. Josephson | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Clyde R. Lewis | Republican | Anchorage | |
Brad Phillips | Republican | Anchorage | |
Vance Phillips | Republican | Anchorage | |
John Rader | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Lowell Thomas, Jr. | Republican | Anchorage | |
F | Walter I. "Bob" Palmer | Republican | Ninilchik |
G | Bill M. Poland (1-27-69 - 3-6-70)[1] | Democratic | Kodiak |
Kathryn Poland (3-6-70 - 1-10-71)[2] | Democratic | Kodiak | |
H | Jay S. Hammond | Republican | Naknek |
I | John Butrovich, Jr. | Republican | Fairbanks |
Paul B. Haggland | Republican | Fairbanks | |
Edward A. Merdes | Democratic | Fairbanks | |
Terry Miller | Republican | North Pole | |
J | Robert R. Blodgett | Democratic | Teller |
K | Raymond C. Christiansen | Democratic | Bethel |
House
District | Name | Party | Location |
---|---|---|---|
1 | William K. Boardman | Republican | Ketchikan |
Frank Peratrovich | Democratic | Klawock | |
2 | Ernest J. Haugen | Republican | Petersburg |
3 | Richard I. Eliason | Republican | Sitka |
4 | Mildred Banfield | Republican | Juneau |
Bill Ray | Democratic | Juneau | |
5 | Henry E. Reeves | Republican | Haines |
6 | R. R. Borer | Republican | Cordova |
7 | Jalmar M. Kerttula | Democratic | Palmer |
8 | Helen D. Beirne | Republican | Spenard |
Genie Chance | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Stanley P. Cornelius | Republican | Anchorage | |
Chancy Croft | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Tom Fink | Republican | Anchorage | |
Gene Guess | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Jess Harris | Republican | Anchorage | |
Earl D. Hillstrand | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Wendell P. Kay | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Richard L. McVeigh | Democratic | Anchorage | |
Ron L. Rettig | Republican | Anchorage | |
Charles J. Sassara, Jr. | Democratic | Anchorage | |
John A. Schwamm | Democratic | Anchorage | |
John M. Sweet | Republican | Anchorage | |
9 | Irwin L. Metcalf | Democratic | Seward |
10 | Clem V. Tillion | Republican | Halibut Cove |
11 | Peter M. Deveau | Democratic | Kodiak |
12 | Carl E. Moses | Republican | Unalaska |
13 | Joseph E. McGill | Democratic | Dillingham |
14 | George H. Hohman, Jr. | Democratic | Bethel |
15 | John C. Sackett | Republican | Galena |
16 | Tury F. Anderson | Republican | Fairbanks |
Mike Bradner | Democratic | Fairbanks | |
John Holm | Republican | Fairbanks | |
Barry W. Jackson | Democratic | Fairbanks | |
Eugene V. Miller | Democratic | Fairbanks | |
Edmund N. Orbeck | Democratic | Fairbanks | |
Donald E. Young | Republican | Fort Yukon | |
17 | Willie Hensley | Democratic | Kotzebue |
18 | Lester Bronson | Democratic | Nome |
19 | Moses Paukan | Democratic | St. Mary's |
See also
- List of Alaska State Legislatures
- 5th Alaska State Legislature, the legislature preceding this one
- 7th Alaska State Legislature, the legislature following this one
- List of governors of Alaska
- List of speakers of the Alaska House of Representatives
- Alaska Legislature
- Alaska Senate
- [1]{AKLeg.gov}
References
General
Alaska Legislature Roster of Members 1913-2010 (PDF). Juneau: Alaska Legislative Affairs Agency. 2010. pp. 45–46. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-04-23. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
Specific and Notes
- v
- t
- e
- 1st (1959–60)
- 2nd (1961–62)
- 3rd (1963–64)
- 4th (1965–66)
- 5th (1967–68)
- 6th (1969–70)
- 7th (1971–72)
- 8th (1973–74)
- 9th (1975–76)
- 10th (1977–78)
- 11th (1979–80)
- 12th (1981–82)
- 13th (1983–84)
- 14th (1985–86)
- 15th (1987–88)
- 16th (1989–90)
- 17th (1991–92)
- 18th (1993–94)
- 19th (1995–96)
- 20th (1997–98)
- 21st (1999–2000)
- 22nd (2001–02)
- 23rd (2003–04)
- 24th (2005–06)
- 25th (2007–08)
- 26th (2009–10)
- 27th (2011–12)
- 28th (2013–14)
- 29th (2015–16)
- 30th (2017–18)
- 31st (2019–20)
- 32nd (2021–22)
- 33rd (2023-24)