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facts about bob bartlett.html

30 Facts About Bob Bartlett

facts about bob bartlett.html1.

Bob Bartlett was opposed to US involvement in Vietnam, along with his fellow Senator Ernest Gruening, and worked to warn people about the dangers of radiation.

2.

Many acts bear his name, including a major law known as the Bob Bartlett Act, mandating handicap access in all federally funded buildings.

3.

In 1945, following the retirement of Anthony Dimond, Bob Bartlett was elected as the delegate from Alaska to the 79th and the six succeeding Congresses, with the backing of Dimond.

4.

Bob Bartlett labored constantly for statehood, being a member of the Alaska Statehood Committee.

5.

Shortly after his graduation, Bob Bartlett began his career in politics.

6.

Bob Bartlett's father died in 1935, so he returned to Fairbanks to run his family's mining business.

7.

Bob Bartlett served as acting Governor multiple times, such as during the opening of the Alaska-Canada Highway.

8.

In 1945, following the retirement of Anthony Dimond, Bob Bartlett was elected as the delegate from Alaska to the 79th and the six succeeding Congresses, with the backing of Dimond.

9.

Bob Bartlett labored constantly for statehood, being a member of the Alaska Statehood Committee.

10.

Bob Bartlett served in this role until his death in office in 1968.

11.

Bob Bartlett possessed the reputation of a quiet man of achievement.

12.

Some of his bills included the Radiation Safety Bill and the Bob Bartlett Act, requiring all federally funded buildings to be accessible to disabled people.

13.

Bob Bartlett was elected as one of Alaska's inaugural Senators along with former Territorial Governor Ernest Gruening in 1958.

14.

Bob Bartlett first introduced the Alaska Statehood Act in 1947, although the bill was defeated.

15.

Bob Bartlett re-introduced the Alaska Statehood Act in 1950, with the backing of President Harry Truman, although, after passing the House of Representatives by a 40-vote margin, it was killed in committee in the Senate.

16.

Bob Bartlett remained unfazed, and he called on Alaskans to join his fight for statehood.

17.

Bob Bartlett was assisted by numerous Alaskans, such as Territorial Governor Mike Stepovich, who was present at the House vote, former Territorial Governor Ernest Gruening, and senior US Department of the Interior official Ted Stevens, who was using the Interior's offices to lobby for statehood.

18.

Bob Bartlett used a powerful procedure, which had been omitted shortly after 1912 because Congress did not plan to add any more states after Arizona.

19.

Bob Bartlett missed this, as he held the promise that he would call back home to Alaska if the bill passed.

20.

Bob Bartlett was in his office, calling Alaskans, for most of the night.

21.

Bob Bartlett would be inaugurated on January 3,1959, the day that Alaska became a state.

22.

Bob Bartlett was a heavy smoker throughout his life, and his health started to fail in the months leading up to his death, with Bob Bartlett receiving treatment for heart ailments.

23.

Bob Bartlett had gone on a vacation to the Caribbean, though couldn't fight off the pain and illness.

24.

On December 11,1968, at the age of 64, Bob Bartlett died following the surgery at Cleveland Clinic Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio.

25.

Bob Bartlett died on the same day that Governor Walter Hickel was announced as President-elect Richard Nixon's nominee for US Secretary of the Interior.

26.

Bob Bartlett was buried in Northern Lights Memorial Park, Fairbanks, Alaska.

27.

Bob Bartlett's daughter, Doris Ann Bob Bartlett, was a literature teacher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

28.

Bob Bartlett served as the UAF's librarian for the 1956 Alaska Constitutional Convention.

29.

Bob Bartlett was born February 7,1934, and she died in 2015.

30.

Bob Bartlett had another daughter, Susie Bernice Bob Bartlett, on December 9,1940.