By
Janet I. Tu
Seattle
Times staff reporter
She
was the type of person for whom a list of accomplishments
merely scratched the surface: the first female employee of
a health department; part of a group that raised $1.3 million
for an endowed university chair; the mother of six children
who had 12 grandchildren, 19 great-grandchildren and three
great-great-grandchildren.
For Fern Zimmer Halgren, those accomplishments reflected broad
interests, deeply held values on social justice, and passion
and commitment to living those values.
Mrs. Halgren died Friday (June 6) at the Norse Home in Seattle's
Phinney Ridge neighborhood. She was 91.
Born in North Dakota to Clara and William Zimmer, Mrs. Halgren
moved to Portland to pursue a nursing degree. There, she met
her husband of 53 years, Sven Halgren, a logger who later
became a longshoreman. Mr. Halgren died in 1985.
They moved to Seattle in 1946. Mrs. Halgren took in boarders,
mainly the elderly and young mothers in need of housing.
She always showed an interest in people. "She found people
much more interesting than cleaning house," said Mrs.
Halgren's daughter-in-law, Carina Halgren.
In fact, she said, Mrs. Halgren had a sign she liked to hang
in her home, which was always open to friends and family:
"Dull women have immaculate homes."
"She
would rather enjoy her friends, enjoy the roses," Carina
Halgren said.
In her 50s, Mrs. Halgren completed a master's degree in social
work at the University of Washington. She became the first
female employee hired by Group Health Cooperative's mental-health
department, where she worked until retirement in 1976.
Mary Gruenewald, who is retired from Group Health, first met
Mrs. Halgren when both were nurses in the 1970s.
A warm and vibrant presence at meetings, Mrs. Halgren "had
a way when she was leading groups of being very inclusive,"
Gruenewald said. "She would look around to see if there
was some timid person and she would call on this person to
give them an opening so they could make a contribution to
the group."
Being an advocate for those in various walks of life was a
central value for Mrs. Halgren. She volunteered and was a
member of groups ranging from the Swedish Club to the Order
of the Eastern Star. She was also active in the labor movement
and in the women's auxiliary of the International Longshore
and Warehouse Union (ILWU).
After the death of ILWU founder and leader Harry Bridges in
1990, a group of local longshoremen, retired longshoremen,
pensioners, widows and relatives — including Mrs.
Halgren — raised $1.3 million to form the Harry Bridges
Endowed Chair in Labor Studies at the University of Washington.
"Fern
Halgren was so dedicated to the good deeds that unions do,"
said David Olson, professor of political science at the UW
and Harry Bridges Endowed Chair Emeritus.
Mrs. Halgren's vision, Olson said, was for those at the Harry
Bridges Center for Labor Studies to be "forceful and
critical students of the labor movement" and to look
at the movement's connections to historical events, broader
progressive politics, and the way working people generally
conduct their lives.
She was also committed to making sure the center nurtured
female scholars and activists. As a voice of the women's auxiliary
of the ILWU, Mrs. Halgren "represented that constituency
in quite an important way," said Margaret Levi, former
Harry Bridges Chair and current professor of political science
and international studies at the UW.
Throughout
her life, Mrs. Halgren remained young at heart. Her son, Jon
Halgren, said that several years ago, she told him she'd like
to find some growth stocks to invest in. "I said: 'Growth
is for young people who can takes risks,' " Jon Halgren
said. "She said: 'Well, that's what I am.' "
In addition to Jon Halgren, Mrs. Halgren is survived by her
children Sven William Halgren, Carl Halgren, Maryann Schur,
Susan Lewicki and Kathy Clake; 12 grandchildren, 19 great-grandchildren
and three great-great-grandchildren. A memorial service will
be held today at 2 p.m. at Norse Home, 5311 Phinney Ave. N.,
Seattle. A potluck picnic is to follow.
The family suggests contributions in lieu of flowers to the
following: University of Washington, Harry Bridges Center
for Labor Studies — Discretionary Fund, P.O. Box
3535-60, Seattle, WA 98195-3560; Group Health Hospice —
Community Foundation, 1730 Minor Ave. No. 1500, Seattle, WA
98101; Seattle Swedish Community Scholarships — Halgren
Endowment, P.O. Box 77313, Seattle, WA 98133.
The Seattle
Times, June12, 2003
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