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Edward B. “Ed” Rasmuson

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Edward B. “Ed” Rasmuson

Birth
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA
Death
4 Jan 2022 (aged 81)
Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Burial
Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska, USA Add to Map
Plot
T10-11-20
Memorial ID
View Source

Bio from merge:

Edward "Ed" Rasmuson, the banker and philanthropist once considered Alaska's closest equivalent to a royal prince because of his wealth and influence, died Tuesday at age 81.

Rasmuson had been diagnosed with brain cancer about a year ago and entered hospice care three days before Christmas. His oldest daughter, Natasha von Imhof, said he died in the company of family on Tuesday afternoon in Anchorage.

"We've all known this time was coming. It's a sad day," said George Suddock, one of Rasmuson's friends since childhood.


Rasmuson inherited control of Alaska's most powerful bank, National Bank of Alaska, and guided it through the pipeline boom and oil bust before it was sold to Wells Fargo in 2000.

When Rasmuson's father died that year, proceeds from the billion-dollar sale made the Rasmuson Foundation into Alaska's largest private philanthropic organization. Rasmuson switched from banking to the chairmanship of the foundation, distributing millions of dollars in gifts to benefit the arts, education, charitable projects, nonprofit organizations and community projects.

Former Alaska Gov. and U.S. Sen. Frank Murkowski, who knew Rasmuson for decades, said what distinguished Rasmuson was a determined focus on Alaska, whether developing its economic resources as a banker, or developing its cultural and social resources through giving. "His interest was really Alaska," Murkowski said.

In a message announcing Rasmuson's death, the Rasmuson Foundation said that under his leadership, it invested in the Alaska Native Science & Engineering Program, helped create Pick.Click.Give. and started efforts in Anchorage to end homelessness and develop world-class trails and parks.

Outside of work, he served on the boards of the University of Alaska and Alaska Pacific University, as a member of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, as an elder at his church, and was known as an avid outdoorsman who hunted across Alaska and in Afghanistan.

"He was a good friend, a great guy, and a generous person. I think it's a loss for the state," said Carl Marrs, a Native corporation executive who was one of Rasmuson's longtime friends and hunting partners.

Rasmuson was born in 1940 in Houston, Texas, the first child of Yakutat-born Elmer Rasmuson and Lile Bernard. Three years after Ed was born, his father moved back to Alaska to take over what was then known as the Bank of Alaska.

As a result, Ed grew up in the rough-and-ready streets of Anchorage during and after World War II. Lile died in 1960, and Elmer Rasmuson remarried the following year. Ed went off to Harvard, earning a degree in history, but he stayed involved in the banking industry on the East Coast.

After the 1964 Good Friday earthquake destroyed the family home, Ed returned to Alaska, then went to work for the family business, first in Wrangell, then Ketchikan and in 1967, back to Anchorage.

"He liked to hunt. I remember him out in Wrangell, sitting on a log waiting for the ducks to come in, and he's sitting there, reading the Wall Street Journal in his duck gear," said Murkowski, describing Rasmuson during his time in Southeast Alaska.


At a Valentine's Day party in 1969, Rasmuson met a young Canadian, Cathryn "Cathy" Robertson. They were engaged that summer and married that fall.

"We saw our marriage as being part of a team, complementing and meshing our strengths," she said Tuesday. "He was the head. I was the heart. His problem-solving, budget-oriented mind mixed with my passions ... we were a formidable team."


Ed was promoted through the ranks of National Bank of Alaska, becoming president in 1974, the same year construction began on the trans-Alaska Pipeline System.

"Ed felt that he was a bridge between the old era and the new, from pencils and bank ledgers ... to computers and internet banking," Cathy said.

When he was picked as the president of the University of Alaska Board of Regents the following year, an Anchorage Times reporter labeled him a "native-born aristocrat in a state too young, free-wheeling and transient to have many such."

Named chairman of the National Bank of Alaska board in 1985, he served in that role until the decision in 1999 to sell the bank. At the time of that choice, it had $2.9 billion in assets and accounted for 45% of all of Alaska's bank deposits.

After the bank's sale, he became chairman of the Rasmuson Foundation, which had more than $400 million in assets at the time.

He was preceded in death by his two sons, David and Bruce.

Bio from merge:

Edward "Ed" Rasmuson, the banker and philanthropist once considered Alaska's closest equivalent to a royal prince because of his wealth and influence, died Tuesday at age 81.

Rasmuson had been diagnosed with brain cancer about a year ago and entered hospice care three days before Christmas. His oldest daughter, Natasha von Imhof, said he died in the company of family on Tuesday afternoon in Anchorage.

"We've all known this time was coming. It's a sad day," said George Suddock, one of Rasmuson's friends since childhood.


Rasmuson inherited control of Alaska's most powerful bank, National Bank of Alaska, and guided it through the pipeline boom and oil bust before it was sold to Wells Fargo in 2000.

When Rasmuson's father died that year, proceeds from the billion-dollar sale made the Rasmuson Foundation into Alaska's largest private philanthropic organization. Rasmuson switched from banking to the chairmanship of the foundation, distributing millions of dollars in gifts to benefit the arts, education, charitable projects, nonprofit organizations and community projects.

Former Alaska Gov. and U.S. Sen. Frank Murkowski, who knew Rasmuson for decades, said what distinguished Rasmuson was a determined focus on Alaska, whether developing its economic resources as a banker, or developing its cultural and social resources through giving. "His interest was really Alaska," Murkowski said.

In a message announcing Rasmuson's death, the Rasmuson Foundation said that under his leadership, it invested in the Alaska Native Science & Engineering Program, helped create Pick.Click.Give. and started efforts in Anchorage to end homelessness and develop world-class trails and parks.

Outside of work, he served on the boards of the University of Alaska and Alaska Pacific University, as a member of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, as an elder at his church, and was known as an avid outdoorsman who hunted across Alaska and in Afghanistan.

"He was a good friend, a great guy, and a generous person. I think it's a loss for the state," said Carl Marrs, a Native corporation executive who was one of Rasmuson's longtime friends and hunting partners.

Rasmuson was born in 1940 in Houston, Texas, the first child of Yakutat-born Elmer Rasmuson and Lile Bernard. Three years after Ed was born, his father moved back to Alaska to take over what was then known as the Bank of Alaska.

As a result, Ed grew up in the rough-and-ready streets of Anchorage during and after World War II. Lile died in 1960, and Elmer Rasmuson remarried the following year. Ed went off to Harvard, earning a degree in history, but he stayed involved in the banking industry on the East Coast.

After the 1964 Good Friday earthquake destroyed the family home, Ed returned to Alaska, then went to work for the family business, first in Wrangell, then Ketchikan and in 1967, back to Anchorage.

"He liked to hunt. I remember him out in Wrangell, sitting on a log waiting for the ducks to come in, and he's sitting there, reading the Wall Street Journal in his duck gear," said Murkowski, describing Rasmuson during his time in Southeast Alaska.


At a Valentine's Day party in 1969, Rasmuson met a young Canadian, Cathryn "Cathy" Robertson. They were engaged that summer and married that fall.

"We saw our marriage as being part of a team, complementing and meshing our strengths," she said Tuesday. "He was the head. I was the heart. His problem-solving, budget-oriented mind mixed with my passions ... we were a formidable team."


Ed was promoted through the ranks of National Bank of Alaska, becoming president in 1974, the same year construction began on the trans-Alaska Pipeline System.

"Ed felt that he was a bridge between the old era and the new, from pencils and bank ledgers ... to computers and internet banking," Cathy said.

When he was picked as the president of the University of Alaska Board of Regents the following year, an Anchorage Times reporter labeled him a "native-born aristocrat in a state too young, free-wheeling and transient to have many such."

Named chairman of the National Bank of Alaska board in 1985, he served in that role until the decision in 1999 to sell the bank. At the time of that choice, it had $2.9 billion in assets and accounted for 45% of all of Alaska's bank deposits.

After the bank's sale, he became chairman of the Rasmuson Foundation, which had more than $400 million in assets at the time.

He was preceded in death by his two sons, David and Bruce.



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