McCain Running Mate Has Tri-City Roots
Tri-City Herald
Aug. 30--Republican presidential hopeful John McCain's new
running mate has deep family roots in the Tri-Cities.
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's grandparents -- Clem and Helen
Sheeran -- came to Richland in 1943 so he could work at Hanford.
They had six children, including Palin's mother Sally Heath, who in
1958 graduated from Columbia High School -- now Richland High.
Palin's father -- Chuck Heath -- attended Columbia Basin
College in Pasco. The couple eventually settled in Idaho. Palin was
born in Sandpoint in 1964.
Palin's late uncle Pat Sheeran was once a District Court
judge in the Tri-Cities.
Richland's Katie Johnson, Sally Heath's sister and Palin's
aunt, said Palin has visited the Tri-Cities every several years
dating back to when she attended the University of Idaho. She
graduated from Idaho with a journalism degree in 1987.
"Every spring break Sarah and those kids would always
come and see grandma and grandpa," Johnson said. "She's
very fond of the Tri-Cities."
Kennewick's Ron Jones, an uncle, said Palin was in town as
recently as last July to thank the family for helping her out on her
gubernatorial campaign in Alaska. There, she's established herself
as a conservative, no-nonsense reformer who has picked battles with
her own party, defeating an incumbent Republican governor in the
2006 primary.
"What a wonderful choice for McCain," Jones said.
"They're both mavericks."
Johnson described her niece as an avid angler, hunter and
marathon runner. She once ran for the title of Miss Alaska and
claimed the title of Miss Congeniality in an earlier contest.
The family didn't learn McCain had chosen Palin until
reports first began circulating on television early Friday. Her name
had been mentioned for the post but the family had no specific
inkling she'd be asked to join the ticket.
Johnson, who maintains regular communications with Palin via
phone and e-mail, said she didn't know how long Palin has been in
McCain's plans.
"Sarah kept it a real secret, that little turkey,"
Johnson said. "She's been kind of quiet the last couple weeks.
I don't know how much she'll be able to talk now."
"We're so excited," said aunt Colleen Jones, Ron's
wife. "It was a shock to us."
Johnson said Palin's emergence as McCain's running mate
shouldn't be surprising considering her string of successes in
private and public life.
"Everything she's ever done she's excelled at,"
Johnson said.
"Sarah's just a real sharp young lady and doesn't take
any guff from anybody," Ron Jones said.
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Copyright (c) 2008, Tri-City Herald, Kennewick, Wash.
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