JUNEAU, Alaska — This week, Bill Walker became the 13th governor of Alaska. Or the 11th. Or 16th. Depends on how you count.
As it turns out, the state of Alaska doesn't appear to have an official way of counting governors and their terms.
Since statehood in 1959, two men, Bill Egan and Wally Hickel, served non-consecutive terms. Three — Egan, Jay Hammond and Tony Knowles — served back-to-back terms.
When asked which number Walker holds, the state historian, Jo Antonson, said she was unaware of how Alaska counts governors. The director of the state Division of Libraries, Archives and Museums, Linda Thibodeau, didn't know, either.
Antonson suggested the Division of Elections might know, but director Gail Fenumiai said her "totally uneducated" guess would be that if governors were elected in non-consecutive terms, they would be counted as new governors.
That would make Walker Alaska's 13th governor.
But in the Hall of Governors — on the third floor of the state Capitol, outside the governor's office — 14 portraits hang, including Walker's.
The first two portraits are for Egan, who initially served between January 1959 and December 1962. Alaska was officially admitted into the union in January 1959. His second portrait is for his term from December 1962 to December 1966.