Alan C. Page was born on August 7, 1945, in Canton, Ohio. He graduated from Canton Central Catholic High School in 1963, received his B.A. in political science from the University of Notre Dame in 1967, and obtained his J.D. from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1978.
After graduating from law school, Page worked as an attorney for a law firm in Minneapolis, then served seven years as an attorney in the office of the Minnesota Attorney General. He sought election to the Minnesota Supreme Court in 1992 and won, becoming the first African American on the court and one of the few associate justices ever to join the court initially through election, rather than appointment by the governor. When Justice Page was reelected in 1998, he became the biggest vote-getter in Minnesota history. He was reelected in 2004 and 2010 and served until he reached the mandatory retirement age of 70 in 2015.
Law was Page’s second career; he was first known for his skills in football both in college and in the NFL. At Notre Dame, Page led the school’s storied football program to the 1966 national championship, and in 1993 he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Page was a first-round draft choice of the Minnesota Vikings in 1967 and he played for the Vikings until 1978. The last three years of his football career were with the Chicago Bears, from 1978 to 1981. During his career, Page played in 218 consecutive games, earning All-Pro honors six times, and was voted to nine consecutive Pro Bowls. In 1971, he was named the NFL’s Most Valuable Player, becoming only the second defensive player in history to be named MVP. In 1988, he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and in 2019, he was chosen as a member of the NFL’s 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.
Also in 1988, Page and his wife Diane founded the Page Education Foundation, which assists Minnesota students of color in their pursuit of post-secondary education. To date, the foundation has awarded $16 million in grants to more than 8,000 students.
In June 2017, after a campaign initiated by students at Alexander Ramsey Middle School in Minneapolis, the school’s name was changed to Justice Page Middle School. In November 2018, Justice Page received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. A new elementary school named “Justice Alan Page Elementary School” opened in 2022 in Maplewood, Minnesota.
Justice Page and his daughter, Kamie Page, have written four children’s picture books: "Alan and His Perfectly Pointy Impossibly Perpendicular Pinky" (2013), "The Invisible You" (2014), "Grandpa Alan’s Sugar Shack" (2017), and "Bee Love (Can Be Hard)" (2020).
In November 2018, President Donald Trump awarded Page the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
In January 2020, Page and Neel Kashkari proposed amending a portion of the Minnesota State Constitution to read, "All children have a fundamental right to a quality education that fully prepares them with the skills necessary for participation in the economy, our democracy, and society, as measured against uniform achievement standards set forth by the state. It is a paramount duty of the state to ensure quality public schools that fulfill this fundamental right."[31]
On October 30, 2020, the North St. Paul/Maplewood/Oakdale School District (ISD 622) announced a new elementary school to be built at 2410 Holloway Avenue in Maplewood will be named Justice Alan Page Elementary School, scheduled to open in September 2022.
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