/ Stars that died in 2023: Edward A. Burdick, American civil servant died he was , 89.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Edward A. Burdick, American civil servant died he was , 89.

Edward Arthur Burdick  was a nonpartisan former chief clerk and parliamentarian of the Minnesota House of Representatives and the past national president of the American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries (ASLCS) died he was , 89..

(December 26, 1921 – March 9, 2011)


Burdick served the citizens of the State of Minnesota more than 60 years until his “final” retirement from the legislature in 2005.[3] According to Minnesota Public Radio and the Board of Commissioners of Blue Earth County in Minnesota, Burdick introduced 80,953 bills and 23,268 were signed into law by the Governor.[2] Former Governor Tim Pawlenty characterized Burdick as "a Minnesota icon and a Minnesota institution" for his legendary service to the nation.[4] Burdick was nationally known as the “Dean” of parliamentary procedures and legislative affairs. To recognize and honor his public service, the Minnesota Legislature erected a bronze bust of Burdick in the State Capitol at his “first” retirement in 1994.

Early education and family newspapers

Burdick was born in Vernon Center in southern Minnesota. He attended the Vernon Center Grade School, the Garden City High School, and the Mankato Commercial College in Minnesota. He worked in the country newspaper business as his parents operated weekly newspapers at Vernon Center, Good Thunder, and Amboy in Blue Earth County, Minnesota. He was a Sunday school teacher and a Boy Scout leader.
His childhood dream of owning a newspaper suddenly changed when he later discovered the opportunity and excitement of public policymaking in legislative sessions at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul. In 1941, he left his parents Harold L. and Carrie M. Burdick in Vernon Center, Minnesota for St. Paul.
A former journalist and experienced editor, Burdick authored a booklet entitled A Few of My Favorite Anecdotes, a collection of short stories based on his public service and newspaper career. He also edited several books—including Glocalization, TRADE for PEACE, and Commercial Providence—authored by his protégé and "adopted" son Dr. Patrick Mendis, a former exchange student from Sri Lanka.[5] Two of these books are dedicated to Burdick and TRADE for PEACE is dedicated to the late Ambassador Harlan Cleveland, the founding dean of the University of Minnesota's Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs, who often testified in the Minnesota Legislature and a mutual friend of Mendis and Burdick.

Legislative and mlitary service

During the 1941 legislative session, Burdick was employed as a page by the Minnesota House of Representatives in St. Paul and that experience led to a full-time public service career. He worked for the legislature on a part-time basis in various capacities until 1957, during which period he served in the U.S. Army at Camp Rucker, Alabama in 1951–53 during the Korean War.
At the time of his honorable discharge, Burdick was the sergeant major of the 135 Infantry Regiment of the U.S. Army, after which he received an appointment as a warrant officer from the Minnesota National Guard. When not working at the State Capitol he worked for the U.S. Department of Commerce in 1949–50 and the Minnesota Department of Military Affairs in 1953–57 at Mankato. He also served as the executive director of the Legislative Building Commission in St. Paul in 1957–65 and traveled widely in the State.[6]

Honors and awards

As the longest-served chief clerk in the nation, Burdick was recognized as the national authority on parliamentary procedure and legislative process. Minnesota House Minority Leader Matt Entenza (DFL-St. Paul) said: “Ed, you are our rock star” in “the Star of the North” (Minnesota).[4]
Other praise for Burdick came from both Republican and Democratic leaders, including former Governor Tim Pawlenty, House Speakers Steve Sviggum, Rod Searle, David Jennings, Dee Long, Robert Vanasek, Phil Carruthers, Martin Sabo, and Irv Anderson as well as former Senate Majority Leader Dean Johnson and Honorable Kathleen Blatz, chief justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court. Popularly known as the “Voice of Minnesota,” Edward Burdick “is quintessentially Minnesotan and [he] is the spirit of the Minnesota House of Representatives," concluded Republican Representative Ron Abrams of Minnetonka.[2]
Elected national president of the American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries (ASLCS) in 1971, Burdick received many accolades during his legislative, military, and public service career.[7] Some of which included the Joseph Beek Distinguished Service Award (1983), the Lloyd Short Public Service Award (1985), the National Conference on State Legislatures’ Legislative Staff Award (2002), and the ASLCS Service Award (2003). In 2010, the Minnesota Legislative Society honored Edward Burdick and his counterpart in the Minnesota Senate, Patrick Flahaven, with the Elmer Anderson Award for their years of public service to the State of Minnesota.
Governor Tim Pawlenty proclaimed January 10, 2005 as "Edward A. Burdick Day" in Minnesota and President George W. Bush wrote on March 14, 2005 that "our Nation is deeply indebted" for his military and public service. In his congratulations on Burdick's "retirement after 62 years of government service, including 38 years as chief clerk for the Minnesota House of Representatives," President Bush said, "Laura and I send our best wishes for many years of happiness" in the sun-setting chapter of his philanthropic, patriotic, and legendary public service career as a great American statesman.

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