Named after Neal Randolph Fosseen, the original Council camp was near Mount Spokane. When sold, the Camp was relocated to the Cowles Scout Reservation.
<Neal
Randolph Fosseen
Oxford Cup Roll Nº 039
Neal Randolph Fosseen, Washington '29
In Eastern Washington's largest city, the name Neal R. Fosseen invokes such
glowing appellations as "the man who changed the face of Spokane" or "the man
who helped save our city from economic collapse."
The local daily, The Spokesman-Review, saluted him with the headline, "Reluctant
leader left his mark," noting: "As a mayoral candidate, Neal Fosseen initially
was reluctant, and as mayor, he occasionally was frustrated, but as a former
mayor, he's a standard-setter.
"The mark of the 91-year-old former public official, Marine Corps colonel and
bank CEO is all over Spokane. There's the Fosseen Room on the campus of Mukogawa
Fort Wright Institute. the Fosseen Award given each year to a military unit for
community service, even Camp Fosseen for Boy Scouts, named for a person who,
at age 12, was the nation's youngest Eagle Scout." Other things that carry
his mark, if not his name: Riverfront Park and Spokane Intercollegiate Research
and Technology Institute, to name but a few.
It was 40 years ago that community leaders tapped Fosseen to reverse the flight
of stores and jobs from downtown. Devoting seven years at 60-70 hours a week to
his 'part-time' job as mayor, he declared, "The best way to bring jobs to
Spokane is to have a well-run city." He introduced the council-city manager
system, and soon he had elevated this "Capital of the Inland Empire" to a
thriving center which led to the highly successful Expo '74 World's Fair.
Fosseen has Honorary Doctor of Laws degrees from Gonzaga and Whitworth
Universities. He and his wife of 65 years, Helen Witherspoon, enjoy a full life
that has included sharing their good fortune with a number of gift annuities to
foundations, including one they recently established with the Beta Theta Pi
Foundation to, as Fosseen sees it, "assist worthy young Betas fulfilling their
educational and leadership goals. It's a win-win situation!"
To recount his lengthy coverage in Who's Who in the World would exceed space.
After graduating from Washington in 1929, he was with Washington Brick, Lime &
Sewer Pipe Co., 1923-58, including 20 years as president; Securities
Intermountain Co., a director, 1954-71; Old National Bank of Washington,
1958-73, chairman and president 1972-73; and Washington Bancshares, 1968-73,
chairman and president 1972-73. He was a director of Utah-Idaho Sugar Co., 1st
National Bank of Spokane, Spokane Industrial Park, North Coast Life Insurance
Co., Old National Bancorp, Quarry Tile Co. and Day Mines, Inc.
Noted for his many civic endeavors, he originated the sister city program and
was personal ambassador to Nishinomiya, Japan, where he was named an honorary
citizen. A lifetime volunteer in Beta Theta Pi, he still serves on the house
corporation board of directors for the Fraternity's chapter at Eastern
Washington University. He and Helen have two sons, Neal, Jr., and Roger.
— Erv Johnson, Idaho ’53, Editor, The Beta Theta Pi
**
Spokane’s Native Son Leaves a Great Legacy
Neal Fosseen — one of the towering figures in the history of AWB — is gone, but
not forgotten.
Fosseen, who chaired the board of directors of AWB’s forerunner, the Association
of Washington Industries (AWI), from 1954 to 1955, died on July 30 in Spokane.
He was 95 and had been incapacitated by a stroke for the previous four years.
Prior to his stroke, Fosseen lived an incredibly active and productive life.
Over the course of nearly a century, he was involved in business, politics, the
military and community affairs. Among the many hats he wore, Fosseen will
probably be best remembered as one of Spokane’s greatest civic leaders.
Born in Yakima on Nov. 27, 1908, Fosseen was only eight when his family moved
to Spokane. Always a high achiever, Fosseen joined the Boy Scouts and, at age
12, achieved the amazing feat of becoming the youngest Eagle Scout in the United
States after only eleven months in the program. Scouting remained an abiding
interest throughout Fosseen’s life. Ultimately, he would serve as the Inland
Empire Council’s president and on its executive board. Today the Scouts honor
his contributions with a Camp Fosseen.
Fosseen graduated from Spokane’s Lewis & Clark High School in 1925. He then
crossed the Cascades and attended the University of Washington from where he
graduated in 1929.
Unlike many other newly minted college graduates who were unable to find work as
the Great Depression began, Fosseen was fortunate to be employed by Washington
Brick, Lime & Sewer Pipe Company, his family’s business, where he had worked on
and off since 1923. By 1938, he was president of the firm. By then, he was also
a married man, having wed Helen Witherspoon in 1936. The couple would ultimately
have two sons.
Prior to World War II, Fosseen served in the U.S. Marine Corps reserve. In 1942,
following Pearl Harbor, he went on active duty as a lieutenant colonel and spent
the war in the South Pacific where he helped fight the Japanese.
“Neal was part of America’s greatest generation — a group that most of are just
beginning to realize what an important contribution they made to world peace and
in fighting tyranny,” AWB President Don Brunell said.
Fosseen’s ties to the military were enduring even after he returned home
victorious from the war in 1945. His legacy can be seen each spring when the
Fosseen Award is given to the Spokane-area military unit that contributes the
most to serving the community.
Fosseen’s generosity of spirit was also evident in the work he put into building
an international friendship with his former enemies — the Japanese — after the
war. It is largely because of his efforts that Spokane enjoys a sister city
relationship with Nishinomiya, Japan. A room is named for Fosseen at Spokane’s
Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute, where Japanese students are immersed in the
English language and American culture. Forty-one years after the end of the war,
Fosseen was personally honored by Emperor Hirohito for his work in building the
sister city relationship between Spokane and Nishinomiya in addition to
protecting Japanese-Americans in eastern Washington.
Following the war, Fosseen returned to the presidency of his family’s business.
After the company was sold in 1957, Fosseen served as a bank executive and on a
variety of boards, including a stint as Gonzaga University regent.
Fosseen’s career took an unexpected turn in 1960, when a group of business
leaders approached him about running for mayor of Spokane.
“I thought to myself ‘How I am I going to get out of this thing?’,” Fosseen
later recalled.
This reluctant politician, however, accepted his “draft notice” when he realized
other business leaders were already running for city council seats as part of a
pro-business slate of candidates.
Fosseen and his allies took Spokane by storm in the May 1960 local election. As
mayor for eight years, his greatest achievements include a revitalized downtown
Spokane and building a modern Spokane International Airport.
Even after leaving the mayoralty, Fosseen’s influence in Spokane was strong as
ever. One of his major contributions was heading the group of business leaders
that would eventually bring a world’s fair — Expo ’74 — to Spokane. The fair’s
greatest legacy was removing the tangled rail yards that obscured the beauty of
Spokane Falls. Fosseen was personally involved in the negotiations with the
Great Northern Railway to secure this property for the fair. After the fair, the
site around the falls became Riverfront Park, a focal point for Spokane and one
of the most beautiful urban parks in Washington.
Named mayor emeritus by the Spokane City Council in 1968, Foseen remained
involved in civic affairs for the remainder of the 20th century. He traveled the
world, swam, played squash, walked for exercise, and enjoyed his three
grandchildren and four great grandchildren.
Fosseen remained active in AWB, too, and was a strong financial supporter of the
Business Week program for high school students.
“We will miss him greatly!” Brunell remarked shortly after Fosseen’s passing on
July 30.
Fosseen’s legacy, however, remains with us, especially in Spokane — a city that
was utterly transformed thanks to his influence.
“Reader, if you seek his memorial, look about you," says the inscription on the
tomb of Sir Christopher Wren in London’s magnificent St. Paul’s Cathedral, which
Wren designed.
Perhaps a marker in honor of Neal Fosseen with the same words should stand in
Spokane’s Riverfront Park, which would not exist were it not for his
determination. He was a man who, indeed, made a difference and left the world a
better place. (Credit to Association of Washington Business, Written by
Paul Schlienz, Nov/Dec 2004)
**
A Fosseen Trek was held on property adjacent and West of Mt. Spokane State Park from the late 1950's to the early 1970's.