Sadie Neakok (March 16, 1916 – June 13, 2004) [1] or Tagiagiña (last name pronounced Niaquq in Iñupiaq) was the first female magistrate in Alaska. [2] [3] She served in Alaska's Second Judicial District in Utqiaġvik, Alaska.
Her father, Charles D. Brower, was a United States Commissioner in the Alaska territory and her mother, Ahsiangatok (Asiaŋŋataq), was Iñupiaq from the Barrow area. [4] [5] Her father originally moved to the Alaska to work as a commercial whaler and was the first white settler there. [5] Neakok was born in 1916. [5] One of ten children, she was sent to San Francisco, California at the age of 14 to attend high school and then attended the University of Alaska. [4] [5] After graduation, she worked first in a hospital, and then as a teacher in a Bureau of Indian Affairs school and a social worker. [6] [4] [5]
She married Nathaniel Neakok, a whaling boat captain [5] who also worked at the Barrow Airport, in 1940 and together they had 13 children and several foster children. [4] [5] As of 1989 [update], the couple had been married for over 50 years. [5] Her oldest son, Bill, was mayor of Utqiaġvik (then Barrow) in the 1970s. [4]
She died in 2004. In 1992 Margaret B. Blackman wrote her biography, Sadie Brower Neakok: An Inupiaq Woman. [5]
In 2009, Neakok was inducted into the Alaska Women's Hall of Fame. [7] She was the first woman elder in her Presbyterian church. [5]
She became a magistrate in Alaska's Second Judicial District when the territory gained statehood in 1958. [4] She ran the court in both the English and Iñupiaq languages, [4] and had to fight to allow cases to be heard in the local language when defendants did not speak English. [5] She followed Eben Hopson, who encouraged her to take the position. [6] Before a courthouse was built, she heard cases in her kitchen. [5]
As a half Inupiaq, Neakok was an advocate in Alaska and in Washington DC for Inuit causes. [4] As a child, she saw the local Naval base enforcing discriminatory segregation against the native people, inspiring her to defend them. [6] As an adult, she served on the tribal council. [6]
In 1961, in response to what she viewed as an unjust hunting law, she helped organize The Barrow Duck-In. [8] [6] [5]
Sadie Neakok (March 16, 1916 – June 13, 2004) [1] or Tagiagiña (last name pronounced Niaquq in Iñupiaq) was the first female magistrate in Alaska. [2] [3] She served in Alaska's Second Judicial District in Utqiaġvik, Alaska.
Her father, Charles D. Brower, was a United States Commissioner in the Alaska territory and her mother, Ahsiangatok (Asiaŋŋataq), was Iñupiaq from the Barrow area. [4] [5] Her father originally moved to the Alaska to work as a commercial whaler and was the first white settler there. [5] Neakok was born in 1916. [5] One of ten children, she was sent to San Francisco, California at the age of 14 to attend high school and then attended the University of Alaska. [4] [5] After graduation, she worked first in a hospital, and then as a teacher in a Bureau of Indian Affairs school and a social worker. [6] [4] [5]
She married Nathaniel Neakok, a whaling boat captain [5] who also worked at the Barrow Airport, in 1940 and together they had 13 children and several foster children. [4] [5] As of 1989 [update], the couple had been married for over 50 years. [5] Her oldest son, Bill, was mayor of Utqiaġvik (then Barrow) in the 1970s. [4]
She died in 2004. In 1992 Margaret B. Blackman wrote her biography, Sadie Brower Neakok: An Inupiaq Woman. [5]
In 2009, Neakok was inducted into the Alaska Women's Hall of Fame. [7] She was the first woman elder in her Presbyterian church. [5]
She became a magistrate in Alaska's Second Judicial District when the territory gained statehood in 1958. [4] She ran the court in both the English and Iñupiaq languages, [4] and had to fight to allow cases to be heard in the local language when defendants did not speak English. [5] She followed Eben Hopson, who encouraged her to take the position. [6] Before a courthouse was built, she heard cases in her kitchen. [5]
As a half Inupiaq, Neakok was an advocate in Alaska and in Washington DC for Inuit causes. [4] As a child, she saw the local Naval base enforcing discriminatory segregation against the native people, inspiring her to defend them. [6] As an adult, she served on the tribal council. [6]
In 1961, in response to what she viewed as an unjust hunting law, she helped organize The Barrow Duck-In. [8] [6] [5]