Jerome L. Blaska Papers, 1959-1963

Biography/History

Jerome L. “Jerry” Blaska was a dairy farmer and four-term Democratic Assemblyman from Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. The following information on his career is abstracted from the 1966 Wisconsin Blue Book. He was born in Sun Prairie on July 4, 1919. After attending local schools, Blaska worked as the field manager for a cannery from 1939 to 1942. From 1942 to 1946 he served in the Army. Blaska returned to farming after World War II, but he nevertheless found time for numerous civic and political involvements. He was a committeeman for the Agricultural Conservation Service, a member of several farm and veterans organizations, and school clerk and a member of the school board. Blaska was also statutory chairman of the Dane County Democratic Party and a member of the executive committee of the Dane County Democratic Party. In April 1959 Blaska was elected to the Assembly in a special election to fill the seat vacated by Carl Thompson. Blaska was reelected in the next three regular elections.

In the Assembly, Blaska was chairman of the Highway Committee, vice-chairman of the Agriculture Committee, and a member of the Committee on Interstate Cooperation. He also served on the Legislative Council's Highway Advisory Committee and its Conservation Land Purchases Committee. In many ways Blaska's liberal record typified the resurgence of the Democratic Party in Dane County during the 1950's, and he won strong electoral support from both union and farm groups. In the legislature he was an advocate for the family farm and small-town problems and a strong supporter of Democratic tax reform policies.