When Willard McGuire led the National Education Association, he was a key player in elevating the federal government's role in education to a Cabinet-level post.
McGuire, a retired Maplewood Middle School teacher who was president of the teachers' union from 1979 to 1983, died on Feb. 1 at his Shoreview home of complications from diabetes and Parkinson's disease. He was 79.
The third-generation educator moved to Washington, D.C., in 1974 when he was elected vice president of the national union.
Working his way to the top of the union, he was motivated by "frustration over things I felt weren't positive for education," he said in a 1981 Minneapolis Star article. "I saw the association as a viable means for change."
After graduating from Macalester College in St. Paul, where he was a classmate and friend of former Vice President Walter Mondale, he taught for two years in Clarkfield, Minn.
After a couple of years, he began teaching in the North St. Paul-Maple-wood School District, where he became president of the local education association.
He rose through the ranks of what is now Education Minnesota and was elected president of the national union in 1979 and reelected in 1981.
Jeanne Thomas, a retired Richfield teacher and a former National Education Association board member, said McGuire was instrumental in elevating education to a cabinet-level post in the White House.