Retiring teacher, coach urges Colony grads to ‘find their 68’
By Jeremiah Bartz Frontiersman.com A football coach using a hockey reference as the centerpiece for his keynote address may
Leo Lucas, 89, passed away Oct. 10, 2000, at Valley Hospital, ending a long and colorful life.
He was born Joseph Francis Lazuka on Aug. 15, 1911, to Agnes Novak Luzaka and Constantine Lazuka in Chicago, Ill. At nine months, he and his older brother were taken by their mother to visit family in Poland. While there, their mother contracted influenza and died, leaving the boys in the care of their grandparents.
With the outbreak of World War I and its chaos, they were unable to return to Chicago until 1920. Early in 1927, at the age of 15, Leo headed out west to become a cowboy, working for ranchers and learning to handle horses. In 1933 he met his future wife, a rancher's daughter by the name of Margaret Fiesler, and they were married Aug. 1, 1934, in Colorado.
In 1938 they decided to try their luck in Alaska. Leo arrived in Cordova March 25 on the S.S. Alaska, with Margaret and their two daughters following in June. A year later they decided to give Fairbanks a try, but since heavy snows in Broad Pass that spring shut down rail traffic for a few days Leo took a bus trip to the Matanuska Valley to see the area.
After bringing Margaret and the girls out and staying in one of John Bugge's cabins, now the site of the First National Bank, they decided they had found home.
During World War II Leo joined the territorial guard and ran heavy equipment helping to build Fort Richardson. After the war he got his own Caterpillar and started clearing land and building roads for the growing population of the Valley.
Additionally, he worked as an assistant guide for Jim Simpson and in 1947 earned his master guide's license and began guiding hands on horseback into the Talkeetna and Chugach mountains, a job he enjoyed more than any for many years.
He was a member of the Moose Lodge, Elks Lodge, American Legion and Pioneers Igloo No. 33.
Survivors include his loving wife of 66 years, Margaret; son, Larry and wife, Sharon, of Palmer; daughter, Elaine Battles, and husband, Gene, of Cascade, Idaho; son, Dan, of Palmer; grandchildren, Glenn, Pat, Kenny and John Brymer, Kirk Winter, Dale Koppenberg, Jeanne Novasad, Lance Lucas, Teanna Lucas, Deanna Tirapelli, Howard Fritz, Rebecca Voss of Spokane, Wash.; and many close and cherished friends in the Valley and throughout Alaska. He was preceded in death by his daughters, Moyene Brymer and Leona Grover. Memorial services will be at the Palmer Moose Lodge Monday at 2 p.m.