The Boston Globe

Ted Schwinden, former Mont. governor

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BILLINGS, Mont. — Ted Schwinden, a wheat farmer and World War II veteran who gained national attention for keeping his home phone number listed during two terms as Montana’s governor, has died. He was 98.

Mr. Schwinden died Saturday in Phoenix at his daughter’s home, his son Dore Schwinden said Monday. The cause of death was “old age,” his son said: “He went to sleep in the afternoon and didn’t wake up.”

Ted Schwinden was a Democrat who served as Montana’s 19th governor from 1981 and 1989.

He and his wife, Jean, opened the governor’s mansion to the public for the first time and often welcomed the public tours in person.

The governor periodical­ly drew national attention because he answered his own, listed telephone. Radio talk shows throughout the nation would call him at home for impromptu interviews.

“When Ted was on the phone, it was impossible to tell if he was talking to the governor of Oregon or a custodian at the Capitol. Every caller warranted his respect and full attention,” his children wrote in Mr. Schwinden’s obituary.

Mr. Schwinden was born Aug. 31, 1925, on his family’s farm in Wolf Point on the Fort Peck Indian Reservatio­n. After graduating as high school valedictor­ian, he enlisted in the US Army and served in Europe and the Pacific.

Returning home he married Jean Christians­on, whose family had a farm about 5 miles from his own. The couple had known each other most of their lives.

Mr. Schwinden went to the University of Montana on the G.I Bill and received bachelor’s and master’s degrees. In the early 1950s the couple returned to the Wolf Point area to help on their family farms after Mr. Schwinden’s father fell ill.

He served on the local school board then in the state Legislatur­e, including as House minority whip in 1961, before becoming president of the Montana Grain Growers Associatio­n.

He was named commission­er of state lands and then elected lieutenant governor under Governor Thomas Judge in 1976. Four years later, saying his boss had “run out of steam” Mr. Schwinden successful­ly challenged Judge in the 1980 Democratic primary before going on to win the general election.

He won a second term in a landslide, with 70 percent of the vote and then chose not to seek reelection in 1988, saying he wanted to concentrat­e more on his farm and family and after earlier pledging to serve only two terms. He stayed in Helena but kept returning to the family farm in Wolf Point to help during harvest time until 1998, his son said.

In recent years, Mr. Schwinden did volunteer hospice work in Arizona, where he had been living for much of the year, his son said.

Mr. Schwinden leaves three children, six grandchild­ren, and nine great grandchild­ren. Jean Schwinden died in 2007.

No public funeral services are planned. A private family gathering will be held at a later date, Dore Schwinden said.

 ?? BILLINGS GAZETTE/AP1985 FILES ?? Mr. Schwinden was a farmer and World War II veteran.
BILLINGS GAZETTE/AP1985 FILES Mr. Schwinden was a farmer and World War II veteran.

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