Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich (Wanamaker)

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Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich (Wanamaker)

Also Known As: ""Kaaxgal.aat""
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Petersburg, Wrangell-Petersburg, AK, United States
Death: December 01, 1958 (47)
Seattle, King, WA, United States
Place of Burial: Juneau, Juneau Borough, Alaska, United States
Immediate Family:

Biological daughter of William Henry Paddock and Edith Tagcook
Adopted daughter of Andrew Jack Wanamaker and Jean Williams
Wife of Roy A. Peratrovich, Sr.
Mother of Private; Franklin Allen Peratrovich and Loretta Marie Peratrovich
Half sister of Anna Paddock; Mattie Paddock; Alice Paddock; Sarah Paddock; Minnie Paddock and 14 others

Managed by: Byron Jason Whitesides
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich (Wanamaker)

Elizabeth’s true parents were:
Mother is Edith Tagcook Paul born 1895 Deishu ( Haines, Alaska) Edith was a Tlingit woman of the Lukaax.adi clan of the Raven moiety.
She died 8 April 1943, probably in Juneau, Alaska
Father is William Henry Paddock,, born 15 July 1864 in Union, Indiana, an Irishman who ran a logging camp and local store in Tingaghu ( Tenakee, Alaska)
He died 14 March 1927 in Tenakee, Alaska
They were not married, William was married to Edith’s sister, Anna Tagcook ( who contracted tuberculosis) Edith went to live at her sister’s house to help care for William and Anna’s children during the lengthy period that Anna was away being treated.

Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich (/ˈprætəvɪtʃ/; July 4, 1911 – December 1, 1958), Tlingit nation, was an important civil rights activist; she worked on behalf of equality for Alaska Natives. In the 1940s, she was credited with advocacy that gained the passage of the territory's Anti-Discrimination Act of 1945, the first anti-discrimination law in the United States. In March 2019, her obituary was added to the New York Times as part of their "Overlooked No More" series.[1]

Elizabeth Peratrovich was born on July 4, 1911 in Petersburg, Alaska,[2] and was a member of the Lukaax̱.ádi clan, in the Raven moiety of the Tlingit nation. She was orphaned at a young age and adopted by Andrew and Mary Wanamaker.[3][4] Andrew was a fisherman and Presbyterian lay minister. Elizabeth grew up with them in Petersburg, Klawock, and Ketchikan, Alaska, and graduated from Ketchikan High School. She attended Sheldon Jackson College in Sitka, and the Western College of Education in Bellingham, Washington (now part of Western Washington University).[5]

On December 15, 1931, Elizabeth married Roy Peratrovich (1908–1989), also a Tlingit, of mixed native and Serbian descent who worked in a cannery. They lived in Klawock, where Roy was elected to four terms as mayor.

Looking for greater opportunities for work and their children, they moved to Juneau, where they found more extensive social and racial discrimination against Alaska Natives. They had children: daughter Loretta, and sons Roy, Jr. and Frank.[6]

The Peratrovich family later moved to Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada, where Roy pursued an economics degree at St. Francis Xavier University. From there they moved to Denver, Colorado, where Roy studied at the University of Denver. In the 1950s, the Peratroviches moved to Oklahoma, and then back to Alaska.

Elizabeth Peratrovich died of cancer on December 1, 1958. She is buried at Evergreen Cemetery, Juneau, Alaska alongside her husband Roy.

Son Roy Peratrovich, Jr., became a noted civil engineer in Alaska. He designed the Brotherhood Bridge in Juneau, which carries the Glacier Highway over the Mendenhall River. In 1979, he co-founded the firm Peratrovich Nottingham & Drage, now known as PND Engineers. After retiring from the engineering profession, he now works as an artist based on Bainbridge Island, Washington.

In 1941, while living in Juneau, the Peratroviches found more discrimination, having difficulty finding housing and seeing signs banning Native entry to public facilities. They petitioned the territorial governor, Ernest Gruening, to ban the "No Natives Allowed" signs then common at public accommodations in that city and elsewhere. The Anti-Discrimination Act was defeated by the territorial legislature in 1943. As leaders of the Alaska Native Brotherhood and the Alaska Native Sisterhood, the Peratroviches lobbied the territory's legislators and represented their organizations in their testimony.

Elizabeth Peratrovich was the last to testify before the territorial Senate voted on the bill in 1945, and her impassioned testimony was considered decisive.

I would not have expected that I, who am barely out of savagery, would have to remind gentlemen with five thousand years of recorded civilization behind them, of our Bill of Rights.[7]

She was responding to earlier comments by territorial senator Allen Shattuck of Juneau. He had earlier asked, "Who are these people, barely out of savagery, who want to associate with us whites, with 5,000 years of recorded civilization behind us?"[6] The Senate voted 11-5 for House Resolution 14, providing "...full and equal accommodations, facilities, and privileges to all citizens in places of public accommodations within the jurisdiction of the Territory of Alaska; to provide penalties for violation."[6] The bill was signed into law by Governor Gruening, nearly 20 years before the US Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Acts of the territorial legislature required final approval from the U.S. Congress, which affirmed it. (Bob Bartlett was noted for his efficiency in that regard.)

Fran Ulmer, who represented Juneau in the Alaska House of Representatives (and who later became lieutenant governor of Alaska), in 1992 said the following about Peratrovich's testimony:

She talked about herself, her friends, her children, and the cruel treatment that consigned Alaska Natives to a second-class existence. She described to the Senate what it means to be unable to buy a house in a decent neighborhood because Natives aren't allowed to live there. She described how children feel when they are refused entrance into movie theaters, or see signs in shop windows that read "No dogs or Natives allowed".[7]

Legacy and honors On February 6, 1988, the Alaska Legislature established February 16 (the day in 1945 on which the Anti-Discrimination Act was signed) as "Elizabeth Peratrovich Day", in order to honor her contributions: "for her courageous, unceasing efforts to eliminate discrimination and bring about equal rights in Alaska" (Alaska Statutes 44.12.065). The Elizabeth Peratrovich Award was established in her honor by the Alaska Native Sisterhood. In 1992, Gallery B of the Alaska House of Representatives chamber in the Alaska State Capitol was renamed in her honor.[7] Of the four galleries located in the respective two chambers, the Peratrovich Gallery is the only one named for someone other than a former legislator (the other House gallery was named for Warren A. Taylor; the Senate galleries were named for former Senators Cliff Groh and Robert H. Ziegler). In 2003, a park[8] in downtown Anchorage was named for Elizabeth and Roy Peratrovich. It encompasses the lawn surrounding Anchorage's former city hall, with a small amphitheater in which concerts and other performances are held.[9] In 2009, a documentary about Peratrovich's groundbreaking civil rights advocacy premiered on October 22 at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention in Anchorage. Entitled For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska, the film was scheduled to air as a PBS documentary film in November 2009. The film was produced by Blueberry Productions, Inc. and was primarily written by Jeffry Lloyd Silverman of Anchorage.[10] In 2017, the theater in Ketchikan's Southeast Alaska Discovery Center was named in honor of Elizabeth Peratrovich, and a companion exhibit exploring her role in the struggle for Alaska Native civil rights was unveiled.[11] In 2018, Elizabeth Peratrovich was chosen by the National Women's History Project as one of its honorees for Women's History Month in the United States.[12] See also List of civil rights leaders Alberta Schenck Adams References Oleksa, Michael (1994). "Elizabeth Wanamaker Peratrovich / Kaaxgal.aat; Roy Peratrovich, Sr. /Lk'uteen," In Haa Kusteeyí, Our Culture: Tlingit Life Stories, ed. by Nora Marks Dauenhauer and Richard Dauenhauer, pp. 525–544. Seattle: University of Washington Press. "Super race theory hit at hearing". The Alaska Daily Empire. Juneau: Helen Troy Monsen. February 6, 1945. p. 8. Retrieved November 18, 2011.

"Overlooked No More: Elizabeth Peratrovich, Rights Advocate for Alaska Natives". The New York Times. 2019-03-20. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
Duncan, Pauline (1999). Elizabeth Peratrovich: Native Civil Rights Leader. Sitka: Children of the Tidelands Publishing. p. 3.
Elizabeth Peratrovich 100 Years, Alaska Newspapers, 4 July 2011
Andrew J. Wanamaker, Chalyee éesh and Wooshkeenaa, of the Kaagwaantaan clan, Eagle Nest House; Mary Wanamaker; and daughter, Elizabeth Peratrovich. Alaska State Library.
Link to 1930 census of Klawock showing the Wanamaker household starting on line 18. FamilySearch.org
"A Recollection of Civil Rights Leader: Elizabeth Peratrovich, 1911-1958", Alaskool, accessed 25 October 2011
Ulmer, Fran (May 1, 1992). "Honoring Elizabeth Wanamaker Peratrovich". Alaska House of Representatives. Anchorage: University of Alaska Anchorage Institute of Social and Economic Research. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
"Elizabeth & Roy Peratrovich Park" (PDF). Municipality of Anchorage. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
"Projects Archive - Flight of the Raven". Anchorage Park Foundation. Anchorage. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2011.
For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska, Alaska Civil Rights Organization, accessed 25 October 2011
Theater Named for Peratrovich. Bowman, Nick. Associated Press/Ketchikan Daily News, Feb. 25, 2017.
"National Women's History Month: What is it, when did it begin, who is being honored this year?". kiro7.com. 25 February 2018.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Peratrovich
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https://www.nwhm.org/education-resources/biography/biographies/eliz...

Elizabeth Wanamaker Peratrovich was a Tlingit Native Alaskan who worked to end racial discrimination. She was born in 1911 and spent her childhood in Alaska. Peratrovich then moved to Bellingham, Washington to attend college. When she returned to Alaska, 10 years later, Peratrovich was shocked by the blatant discrimination towards Native Alaskans. Signs hung in store and business windows read “No Dogs, No Natives.” In February 1945, Peratrovich attended the Territorial Senate and spoke on behalf of the Alaska Native Sisterhood in support of the equal rights bill that would prohibit racial discrimination. Her speech was met with thunderous applause. The Senate then passed the Alaska Civil Rights Act with of vote of 11 to 5. In 1988, the Alaska Legislature established February 16th as “The Annual Elizabeth Peratrovich Day,” in honor of Peratrovich's efforts to help the bill pass.

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Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich (Wanamaker)'s Timeline

1911
July 4, 1911
Petersburg, Wrangell-Petersburg, AK, United States
1937
1937
1940
1940
1958
December 1, 1958
Age 47
Seattle, King, WA, United States
December 4, 1958
Age 47
Evergreen Cemetery, Juneau, Juneau Borough, Alaska, United States