Rochester Civic Leader Former State Sen. Nancy Brataas Dies; Services Pending Nancy Osborn Brataas, 86, died April 17 of chronic lung disease. Much beloved and greatly missed, Nancy and her exuberantly original life will be celebrated at a memorial in Rochester on a date to be announced on www.nancybrataas.org next week. With the help of caregivers at Mayo Clinic and Seasons Hospice in Rochester, and many friends and family members, Nancy outwitted lung cancer for 15 years. Because she had severe emphysema, surgery was limited to a non-curative procedure, but she was indeed cured by it. She lived many happy years after that despite her emphysema. During that time, she travelled around the world twice with her oxygen tanksonce on the Queen Mary 2 luxury cruise ship. The trips were as much about putting cancer in its place as they were about reveling in the beauty and the wonder of a world she so loved. A career politician in the Independent-Republican Party of Minnesota, Nancy was the first woman elected to the Minnesota Senate, winning a special election in 1975 and serving until 1992. She represented Rochester, and parts of Olmsted County, fiercely and courageously. Faced with terminal emphysema, Nancy negotiatedas with so many things in her lifedeath on her terms, a deal cut late in the session. She entered Seasons Hospice April 13 and slept for a day. On April 15 she rallied to sign and file her taxesand experienced the life-renewing lift that paying taxes gives one: filers high. This fueled her imagination. Within hours of filing, she began planning a remodeling of her hospice room to accommodate her tastes. She booked a truck to transport needed items. The next day she changed her mind, and instead announced she was ready to die. Nancy began work in earnest on her death project April 16. She finished it the morning of April 17, departing her life peacefully with family at her bedside. She uttered her last word April 16, as a question: Unconventional? Born in Minneapolis on Jan. 19, 1928, to Flora W. and John D. Osborn, Nancy was educated in Minneapolis and Daytona Beach, Fla., graduating from Sea Breeze High School, where she was voted Most Likely to Succeed (as well as half of "Most Attractive Couple). Returning to Minneapolis to attend the University of Minnesota, Nancy studied art history and met the newly-returned student, World War II Navy pilot, Mark Gerard Jerry Brataas. They married on November 27, 1948 and moved to Rochester where Jerry enjoyed a lifelong career as an administrator at Mayo Clinic. They spent their entire married lives in Rochester and raised their two children, Mark and Anne, there. During these early years Nancy enjoyed hobbies such as horseback riding, snorkeling, cross-country car trips for family vacations and summer camping trips in the wilderness that was to later become the Boundary Waters Canoe Area. She taught church school at Calvary Episcopal Church, and helped lead her children's various scouting activities. Nancy first became involved casually in Republican Party politics in 1956 as a volunteer for door-knocking campaigns to mobilize voters. Her eager spirit, quick, analytical mind, engaging social presence and strategic brilliance quickly attracted the attention of Republican leadership. She rose through the volunteer ranks, ably serving in a number of capacities, including as chair of the Minnesota Republican Party, 1963-69, and chair of the Minnesota Republican Finance Committee, 1969-71. In 1972, she worked in Washington, D.C., on the Committee to Re-Elect the President, Richard M. Nixon. As a senator, Nancy developed expertise in education, jobs and taxes. She made major contributions to workers compensation law, Title IX opportunities for women in sports, flood control for Rochester, passage in 1983 of the Rochester local option sales tax, repurposing of the closed Rochester State Hospital into a federal facility, and most recently, the establishment of the University of Minnesota Rochester. Nancy also started and ran a management and data-processing business, Nancy Brataas Associates, Inc.She specialized in strategically mobilizing voters through phone-center voter ID and recruitment campaigns. Her patented system was successfully used throughout the country in non-profit fundraising and political campaigns from Ohio to Texas to Michigan, and inMinnesota. As her husband's health declined, Nancy retired from the Senate in 1992. She continued her political leadership in other organizations, focusing on higher education with the Minnesota State Colleges and University System, on lung health with Clearway Minnesota, and on preserving downtown Rochesters character, health and safety by working for an alternative to routing coal trains through the medical corridor. A connoisseur of gardens, Nancy loved both formal gardens and wild woodland plantings. Hostas and clematis were special favorites. She devoted great energy to perfecting gardens around her home, welcoming the public each summer to her"Come to the Garden!" open yard event. Her grandchildren remember those same gardens as ideal turf for Nerf wars in a summer haven created by a laughing grandmother who had Legos, puzzles and Playmobil in every closet, train sets improbably stowed in antique brass pots, and who rode her pink tricycle to Soldier's Field swimming pool with them, laughing and panting all the way. Nancy was preceded in death by her parents, her sister Gail, her husband Jerry, and her son Mark. She is survived by her daughter Anne, her son-in-law Charles Hathaway, their sons Kip and Aaron, all of St. Paul; and her sister Joan Osborn of Norwalk, Conn. Nancys life will be celebrated in Rochester,details to be announced. Ranfranz & Vine Funeral Homes is handling arrangements. Memorials may be made to Mayo Clinic, University of Minnesota Rochester, Clearway Minnesotaor any cause of your choosing that needs help. Nancy was here to help; she believed we all are.