During her first four years in office, Sara Fletcher Luther held her own as the only female legislator in the Minnesota State Capitol. For the next eight years, she was one of two women in the Legislature.
Better known as Sally, Luther served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1951 to 1962. She died of leukemia in her Florida home on Feb. 3. Luther was 96.
"She was fairly outspoken. She wasn't shy or reluctant to express her views. She seemed quite willing to speak openly and forcefully," recalled Don Fraser, former state senator, U.S. representative and Minneapolis mayor.
Luther, who represented Minneapolis' District 30, was chairwoman of the Civil Administration and Welfare committees.
"She was active and always initiating ideas and promoting legislation," Fraser said. "She overcame whatever natural problems there were as a woman because she was so friendly and so engaged. People really thought highly of her."
Luther was born in Minneapolis in 1918 to prominent attorney Clark Fletcher and Alice Fletcher, then the "Grande Dame" of Deephaven.
Luther graduated from Vassar College in 1940 with a degree in drama and served as class correspondent for the rest of her life.
At Vassar, she became acquainted with the college's longtime friend, Eleanor Roosevelt. Luther would later introduce Roosevelt to crowds before speeches in Minneapolis.