Oscar S. Gill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oscar S. Gill (1880 - 1947) was an Alaskan Republican politician. He was Mayor of Anchorage, Alaska from 1934-1936.

Oscar Stephen Gill was born April 3, 1880 in St. Lawrence, Pennsylvania. He moved with his wife, Emma Dohrman Gill, to Alaska in 1907. In 1909, he ran a sawmill in Susitna, lived for a time in Knik, carrying mail by dog sled from Seward to Susitna and Iditarod. In 1915, he moved to Ship Creek to work on the Alaska Railroad. As the encampment at Ship Creek grew into the city of Anchorage, Gill put down roots, floating his two-story house down the Knik River to 918 W. 10th Avenue, where it remained until 1982.

From 1916-1923, Gill ran a lighterage service under contract with the Alaska Engineering Commission. In 1923, he opened Anchorage's first garage at the corner of Fourth Avenue and I Street.

In 1929, Gill was elected to the city council, serving until 1932, when he was elected Mayor of Anchorage for one term. He was re-elected in 1934, and served two more terms. His son, Victor Gill, made an unsuccessful bid to succeed him as Mayor of Anchorage in 1936.[1]

In 1944, Oscar Gill was elected to the Alaska Territorial House of Representatives, representing the 3rd District. He was re-elected in 1946, becoming Speaker of the House in 1947. He died while still in office, November 18, 1947, and was buried in the Anchorage Memorial Park Cemetery.

The Oscar Gill House, threatened with demolition in 1982, was purchased by the Municipality of Anchorage and moved into storage. In 1994 it was restored to a new location at 1344 W. 10th Avenue. It now houses a bed and breakfast.

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ March 26, "Asks Father's Post as Mayor", New York Times: 12

[edit] Bibliography

  • Ritter, Charles F. and others, American Legislative Leaders in the West, 1911-1994, 1997 (ISBN 031330212X)
Preceded by
James Delaney
Mayor of Anchorage
19321933
Succeeded by
Thomas J. McCroskey
Preceded by
Thomas J. McCroskey
Mayor of Anchorage
19341936
Succeeded by
Herbert E. Brown