LAURA Mae (Beltz) Bergt Crockett BERGT

• Community Service
• Civic Service
Inducted: 2015
Deceased: 1984
Kotzebue
LAURA Mae (Beltz) Bergt Crockett BERGT
Laura Mae Beltz was born in Candle, Alaska, a small mining town, and grew up in Kotzebue with one sister and two brothers. She graduated from Mount Edgecombe High School and married prominent Alaska businessman Neil Bergt in 1958. They had four children, two daughters and two sons. Divorced in 1977, she was then married to William Crockett, a lawyer from Hawaii.
Bergt’s history included many national and local policy positions. Gov. Walter Hickel appointed her a member of the Native Claims Task Force. President Richard Nixon appointed her a member of the National Council on Indian Opportunity where she testified in Congress. In these roles Bergt established a friendship with Vice President Spiro Agnew, and introduced the Alaska Federation of Natives Leadership to the Nixon administration. Bergt was the person who set up the initial meeting between Alaska Federation of Native’s (AFN) president, Don Wright and the Nixon administration and it was this meeting that resulted in President Nixon’s support of the AFN position on ANCSA.
Bergt was a member numerous influential commissions, councils and boards including the Alaska Federation of Natives, Native American Council of Regents of the Institute of American Indian Arts, Alaska State Rural Affairs Commission. She was also secretary for the Alaska Federation of Natives, director of Tundra Times newspaper, president of Musk Ox Producers Co-Op and organizer and chair of the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics. In addition to her civic and public service, she participated in many national promotional activities on behalf of Alaska and Alaska Native people.
Among all of her distinguished professional, political, and community accomplishments, Bergt was also a gold medalist in the Eskimo blanket toss and enjoyed Alpine skiing and sky diving. She continues to be honored by her family, which now includes nine grandchildren and four great grandchildren and through many publications and meetings that are dedicated to her service to Alaska and the Alaska Native people.
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