At a graveside service for Judy McLaughlin earlier this month, St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman noted that she was taking her rightful place among the city's movers and shakers -- Alexander Ramsey, Henry Sibley, Amherst Wilder, Harriet Bishop.
McLaughlin, 66, was a behind-the-scenes powerhouse in DFL politics -- along with her late husband, Mike -- and in the preservation and reincarnation of the Ramsey Hill neighborhood. She died of chronic heart and lung disease Sept. 5.
Today, the eastern end of St. Paul's Summit Avenue is resplendent with historic homes and tiny parks. But when McLaughlin and her husband bought a derelict mansion at 275 Summit in 1971, the neighborhood was riddled with crime, and it wasn't unusual for women walking down the sidewalk to be propositioned for sex. Many of the homes were boarded up.
The couple turned Summit Manor into not only their home, but also a showplace for wedding receptions, hundreds of DFL fundraisers and a renowned annual New Year's Eve party.
Their son David, who now runs the family business, said Summit Manor plays host to about 60 wedding receptions a year, three each weekend during the high season.
McLaughlin was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and became a U.S. citizen when her family moved to Fargo, N.D. She earned a degree in political science from North Dakota State University, worked in Washington, D.C., then moved to St. Paul where she met and married Mike McLaughlin, longtime Fourth District DFL chair.
McLaughlin worked at the Legislature as administrative assistant to House Appropriations Chairman Fred Norton and later as his chief of staff when he became House speaker and majority leader.
The McLaughlins encouraged Paul Wellstone to run for the U.S. Senate in 1990 and campaigned for him. Their son, Will, 23, an aide to Wellstone, was among those who died with the senator in an Oct. 25, 2002, plane crash in northern Minnesota.