°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±appBoard of Regents
- 2002-2025 Mary Hughes
- 2011-2019 Jyotsna Heckman
- 2011-2015 Michael Powers
- 2011-2013 Mari Freitag
- 2012-2029 - Dale G. Anderson
- 2013-2021 Gloria O'Neill
- 2013-2015 Courtney Enright
- 2015-2023 Sheri Buretta
- 2015-2023 John Davies
- 2015-2023 Lisa Parker
- 2015-2017 Stacey Lucason
- 2015-2019 Deena Bishop
- 2017-2025 Karen Perdue
- 2017-2019 Stephen ‘Joey’ Sweet
- 2019-2021 John Bania
- 2019-2027 Darroll R. Hargraves
- 2019-2021 Cachet Garrett
- 2021-2029 Ralph Seekins
°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±appRegent History Highlights
In the beginning...
On July 4, 1915, when James Wickersham laid the cornerstone for the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, the young territory of Alaska had only been home to a territorial government for three years. The Klondike Gold Rush had put Alaska on the map, but gold fever had waned, and Fairbanks was a declining mining camp with a sparse population.
When the Territorial Legislature met again two years later, Andrew Nerland, a senator for the Fourth Judicial District, where Fairbanks was located, introduced two bills supporting the establishment of a university.
On May 3, 1917, Alaska's Governor J.F.A. Strong signed Senate Bill 14 and Senate Bill 15 that established the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines.
The first eight
In the fall of 1917, Governor Strong established the Board of Trustees and appointed the eight original members. Five of the trustees were from Fairbanks: Harriet Hess, Anton J. Nordale, Henry Bradley Parkin, Albert R. Heilig, and Richard C. Wood. The remaining three members were Philip Ernst of Nome, Leo Francis Shaw of Anchorage and Louis Scott Keller of Skagway.
The first meeting of the Board of Trustees was on August 15, 1917 in the office of Trustee Albert Heilig. Heilig was appointed board chair and Trustee Harriet Hess was appointed board secretary. At the first meeting Heilig had doubts that the board could legally act until the appointed members were confirmed by the Legislature. Confirmation came at the next meeting of the Legislature.
From Trustees to Regents
On March 12, 1935 Governor John W. Troy signed the bill that changed the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines to the University of Alaska.
House Bill 97 (Chapter 49 of the Session Laws of Alaska, 1935) outlined provisions for the university including creation of a Board of Regents to replace the Board of Trustees, and defined the duties and powers of the regents and the university president.
Eight becomes eleven
In 1974 the Board of Regents appointed Ronald W. Wendte, the first student regent.
In 1975 the Board created two more seats. Margaret J. Hall and Christopher R. Cooke were the first to be appointed to the newly created seats.
Regents today
Since the Board of Trustees' founding, nearly 200 regents and trustees have been appointed to serve the university. Regents have come from all over the state and represent many different backgrounds, including miners, fishermen, electricians, business owners, attorneys, teachers, doctors and bankers.
The Board of Regents continues to adapt to an ever changing university and state, but the purpose has always stayed the same: to develop and advance the University of Alaska.