June Carlson

OBIT Carlson 10-04
OBIT Carlson 10-04

June Carlson, 95, passed away peacefully, Sept. 7, 2017, surrounded by her children, at a Fine Pearle Assisted Living home in Anchorage, Alaska. Ethel June Hazleton was born in Milwaukee, Oregon, in June 1922. She was raised in Oregon and the Morgan Hill area of California and was one of seven children by parents George C. Hazleton and Rhoda E. Pursifull. June was the beloved wife of Robert A. Carlson for over 51 years and is survived by her children William (Orpha) and Donald (Peggy), grandchildren Jeff, Brenna and Erik, great grandson Kevin, great, great granddaughters Marie and Marilyn, nephew Dick Detra (Karma), niece Nancy Shaddock (James), grandnieces/nephews Michele DeMarco (Robert), Chuck James (Susan), children of the Hazleton, Newlin and Kessler families, along with many other friends and in-laws.

June first saw her husband, Bob, in the early 1940s. As he roared past her on a motorcycle, she proclaimed "I'm going to meet that guy!" and they were soon married in Reno, Nevada. After Bob returned home from serving in the South Pacific during WWII, they settled in the Santa Clara County area of California. By 1960, the Carlson family found themselves in Palmer, Alaska, and within a couple years had taken over a homestead outside of Wasilla. While Bob worked the plumbing trades, June was a hardworking homemaker, developing the homestead and serving as a chef for schools and summer camps. June reluctantly left the homestead in her mid 80's and spent the last years of her life living at the Wasilla Senior Campus and then in an exceptional assisted living home surrounded by the laughter and love of her family. June was an original mother earther who loved to garden, hunt, gather, can vegetables, darn socks, quilt, read, road trip and laugh. She made her own laundry soap, jams, moose sausage, arthritis remedies, as well as Alaskan floral and berry wines. Her thriftiness and care for nature was vast. When June was college age, she aspired to be an architect but was rebuffed by the prevailing gender roles of the time. She went on to design homes on napkins and notepads throughout her long life. June's creativity, perseverance, and attitude are what made her the strong wife, mother, grandma and Alaskan woman she was. Family requests that donations are sent to the Literacy Council of Alaska to honor her love of reading.

Great! You’ve successfully signed up.

Welcome back! You've successfully signed in.

You've successfully subscribed to Frontiersman.

Success! Check your email for magic link to sign-in.

Success! Your billing info has been updated.

Your billing was not updated.