Herman Ekern Explained

Herman Ekern
Order:28th
Office:Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin
Term Start:May 16, 1938
Term End:January 2, 1939
Governor:Philip La Follette
Predecessor:Henry Gunderson
Successor:Walter Samuel Goodland
Order1:25th
Office1:Attorney General of Wisconsin
Term Start1:January 1, 1923
Term End1:January 3, 1927
Governor1:John J. Blaine
Predecessor1:William J. Morgan
Successor1:John W. Reynolds Sr.
Order2:8th
Title2:Commissioner of Insurance of Wisconsin
Term Start2:January 2, 1911
Term End2:June 30, 1915
Governor2:Francis E. McGovern
Emanuel L. Philipp
Predecessor2:George E. Beedle
Successor2:M. J. Cleary
Order3:42nd
Office3:Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Term Start3:January 9, 1905
Term End3:January 4, 1909
Successor3:Levi H. Bancroft
State4:Wisconsin
State Assembly4:Wisconsin
District4:Trempealeau County
Term Start4:January 5, 1903
Term End4:January 4, 1909
Birth Name:Herman Lewis Ekern
Birth Date:27 December 1872
Birth Place:Pigeon Falls, Wisconsin, U.S.
Death Place:Dane, Wisconsin, U.S.
Restingplace:Forest Hill Cemetery,
Spouse:Lily C. Anderson
Relatives:Peder Ekern (uncle)
Alma Mater:University of Wisconsin Law School
Known For:Co-founding Lutheran Brotherhood

Herman Lewis Ekern (December 27, 1872  - December 4, 1954)[1] was an American attorney and progressive Republican politician who served as the 28th lieutenant governor of Wisconsin, the 25th attorney general of Wisconsin, and the 42nd speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly. He was also one of the founders of Lutheran Brotherhood.[2]

Background

Herman Lewis Ekern was born in 1872 near Pigeon Falls, Wisconsin. He was the son of Even Ekern and Elizabeth (Grimsrud) Ekern. He received a law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1894. Following his graduation, he practiced law at Whitehall, Wisconsin in co-partnership with H. A. Anderson under the firm name of Anderson & Ekern.[3]

Career

Five years later was elected district attorney of Trempealeau County. He served three terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly, from 1903 until 1907, and was the speaker of the Assembly in his final term.[4] During his time in the Assembly, he was noted for helping design Wisconsin's life insurance code. From 1911 until 1915, he served as Wisconsin's insurance commissioner. Afterwards, he helped form a law partnership which specialized in insurance cases and helped write the Federal Soldiers' and Sailors' War Risk Insurance Act.[5]

Lifelong Lutherans, Herman Ekern and J. A. O. Preus, Minnesota insurance commissioner and future Governor of Minnesota (1921–1925) had proposed launching a not-for-profit mutual aid society. The founding of Lutheran Brotherhood came as a result of the 1917 merger convention of the Norwegian Lutheran Church of America. In 1929, Herman Ekern became president in the organization which would grow in time to become Thrivent Financial for Lutherans.[6]

Ekern later returned to his political career, serving as Wisconsin's Attorney General from 1923 until 1927. After Lieutenant Governor Henry Gunderson resigned in 1937, Governor Philip La Follette named Ekern Lieutenant Governor the following year. The appointment was challenged and upheld in State ex rel. Martin v. Ekern. After his term ended in 1939, Ekern served on the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin until 1943. Ekern later was in private law practice in Chicago and Madison.[7]

In 1949, he received a Distinguished Alumni Award from the Alumni Association of the University of Wisconsin. Herman Ekern died in 1954. The papers of Herman Ekern are maintained within the archives of the Wisconsin Historical Society.[8] [9]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. 'Obituary of Herman Ekern,' Sheboygan Press (Wisconsin), December 7, 1954, pg 26
  2. 1920 Federal Census, Series: T625 Roll: 1981 Page: 97
  3. http://personal.atl.bellsouth.net/f/h/fhat/ekern.htm Ekern is a Norwegian name (Origin of The Name Ekern)
  4. 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1907,' Biographical Sketch of Herman L. Ekern, pg. 1172
  5. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=2260&term_type_id=1&letter=E Term: Ekern, Herman Lewis 1872 - 1954 (Dictionary of Wisconsin History)
  6. https://www.thrivent.com/aboutus/whoweare/history.html The Early Years (Thrivent Financial for Lutherans)
  7. http://ltgov.wisconsin.gov/subcategory.asp?linksubcatid=2092&linkcatid=2042&linkid=1070&locid=126 Herman L. Ekern, 1938-1939 (Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin)
  8. http://arcat.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?Search_Arg=rlin+%22wihv93-A1217%22&SL=None&Search_Code=CMD&DB=local&CNT=30 Papers of Herman L. Ekern (Wisconsin Historical Society)
  9. Web site: Herman L. Ekern, Madison, 1949 Distinguished Alumni Award (Wisconsin Alumni Association) . 2010-09-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101219205246/http://www.uwalumni.com/alpha.aspx . 2010-12-19 . dead .