Lucille Victoria (Romsa) McKay, 82,
a longtime business owner and active member of the Blackfeet
tribal community, died of natural causes Friday at a Browning
hospital.
A wake is in progress at her home at 212 2nd Ave. N.W. in
Browning. Rosary is 7 p.m. Monday, with funeral Mass and
traditional ceremonies at 2 p.m. Tuesday, both at Little Flower
Catholic Church. Burial will take place in Willow Creek Cemetery
in Browning. Whitted Funeral Chapel is in charge of
arrangements.
Lucille is survived by her children Diane Magee, Mary
Johnson, Tom McKay, Mike McKay and Joe McKay, all of Browning;
her sister, Marie A. Croff of Browning; 21 grandchildren and 30
great-grandchildren; many nieces and nephews, and several great-
and great-great-nieces and nephews.
Lucille was born in the old hospital in Blackfoot, Mont., on
Jan. 6, 1923, to Jesse Romsa and Sara Adell Brown Romsa. She was
the oldest of three children - Benny and Marie were the younger
siblings. The family spent their early years ranching on the
Milk River. Later, Lucille moved with her family to their ranch
on Badger Creek, just below Old Agency.
Lucille attended school in Browning, where she graduated at
the top of her class and then went on to attend the University
of Montana. The war interrupted her formal education after one
year and she returned to Browning.
She married her high school sweetheart, Iliff McKay, on Nov.
24, 1943. Except for time spent in Spokane while Iliff attended
the Kinnman Business School and a short time while he worked for
the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the couple spent their lives on
the Blackfeet Reservation.
Iliff died in 1979. Lucille never remarried.
Lucille not only made one of the first efforts by an Indian
woman to obtain a college education, she was also an Indian
career woman long before it was a popular life choice. In her
early working life, Lucille worked as an assistant clerk for the
Glacier County Clerk and Recorder in Cut Bank. While raising her
family of five children, she worked as a checker at the Buttrey
store in Browning and at the old Blackfeet Tribal Store. Once
all of her children were in school, she went to work for the
Bureau of Indian Affairs Credit Program at the Blackfeet Agency
and later went on to become the first Tribal Credit Officer for
the BIA and for the Blackfeet Tribal Credit Program.
While raising her family and working at her own job, Lucille
and husband Iliff also started one of the first Indian-owned
businesses on the Blackfeet Reservation: the Junction Drive-Inn.
Started in the early 1950s from the family's Tribal claim
monies, the business went on to provide summer employment and a
place to grow and learn for many young people on the
Reservation.
In 2002, Lucille received a Presidential Achievement Award
from President George W Bush for Iliff's and her achievements
through the Junction Drive-Inn. That award was presented at the
National Indian Business Leaders Summit in Phoenix, Ariz. When
asked what she wanted the business leaders at the conference to
know about the Drive-Inn, she responded, "Tell them that we used
to do it all by hand, including peeling potatoes."
Still the longest-operating Indian owned business on the
Blackfeet Reservation, young people who worked there went on to
become doctors, lawyers, tribal judges, tribal council members,
professional administrators for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and
the Indian Health Service, as well as many, many professional
educators. Lucille and Iliff always thought of the many young
people who worked for them at the Drive-Inn as their second
family.
Throughout the time that her children were attending schools
in Browning, Lucille was a strong supporter of school activities
and events. In the early 1960s, Lucille's station wagon was
often the unofficial "pep bus," as the school did not send an
official bus. She traveled across the state, often through
blizzards, to make sure that someone was there to support the
kids. Lucille also helped out as a Girl Scout leader in earlier
times.
Lucille saw formal education as an important step toward a
better life and helping Indian people. She was proud of her own
children in that regard and her family was featured in the
University of Montana Alumni magazine for the generations who
had attended and earned degrees from the University. Today,
Lucille's five children who survive her continue to live and
work on the Reservation. Dianne Magee is an elementary school
principal; Mary Johnson is the Superintendent of Browning Public
Schools; Tom McKay is the Administrative Officer for the
Blackfeet Housing Program; Mike McKay is the Assistant
Administrator for the Blackfeet Care Center (nursing home); and
Joe McKay is a practicing attorney.
Lucille also has numerous nieces, nephews, grandchildren and
children of her "Drive-Inn family" who also went on to earn
college degrees.
Lucille was also very active in the Catholic Church in
Browning. She was a member of the Altar Society and the Kateri
Tekawitha Society. She traveled to Rome when Kateri Tekawitha
was beatified by the church.
Lucille epitomized the values of Indian women living in a
modern world. She gave her life to the care of family, her
community and her spirituality. To Lucille, these important
things were not separate, they were woven together as one.
Lucille enjoyed playing cards and dancing. In her youth, she
loved the old time barn dances and could be counted on to dance
to the last song. Later in life she took up the women's
traditional dance and followed the pow-wow circuit with her
sister, Marie, throughout the United States and Canada.
Lucille also loved to travel. She had traveled to China,
Eastern Europe, Finland, Metagorie, Rome, Ireland and Taiwan.
She also made junkets with other elderly friends to Las Vegas
and around the western United States.
In addition to her husband, Lucille was preceded in death by
her parents and her brother, Benedict "Benny" Romsa.
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