Former State Sen. Ann Bedsole passed away on Monday at the age of 95, according to the Alabama Republican Party (ALGOP).
Bedsole made history as the first Republican woman elected to the Alabama House of Representatives and later the first woman of either party to serve in the Alabama State Senate.
ALGOP vice chairwoman Joan Reynolds said on Tuesday that Bedsole’s legacy will endure for generations.
“Ann Bedsole opened doors that had never been opened for women in Alabama politics,” Reynolds said. “She broke barriers with grace, courage, and conviction, and she did it at a time when few women were ever given the opportunity. Her leadership helped build the Alabama Republican Party into what it is today, and her legacy will continue to inspire conservative women across our state for years to come.”
Beyond her legislative achievements, Bedsole was an active and influential voice within the Republican Party. She served on the Alabama Republican State Executive Committee, participated as an alternate delegate to the 1964 Republican National Convention, and later became both a delegate and vice chair of the Alabama delegation to the 1972 Republican National Convention.
Tiffany Noel, president of the Alabama Federation of Republican Women—the state’s leading Republican women’s organization with more than 1,900 members across 40+ chapters—also honored her legacy.
“Senator Bedsole embodied the core values our Federation fights for every day—individual initiative, strong families, and accountable government,” Noel said. “She was a role model for Republican women long before it was common to see women in elected office. Her life’s work advanced not only our Party, but the principles of freedom and opportunity that define our nation.”
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