Betty Wilson, a tireless politics and government reporter for the Minneapolis Star — and later the Star Tribune — who earned the nickname "Queen of the Scoop" for numerous groundbreaking stories in the 1970s and 1980s, died Dec. 21 at Ebenezer Ridges Care Center in Burnsville. She was 99.
Mark Wilson of Apple Valley, one of her two surviving sons, said she fell in October and broke her hip and had been in declining health since then.
Wilson was married with children and writing press releases for the Bloomington Mothers Club, when the Richfield-Bloomington News hired her in the 1950s. After moving to the Bloomington Sun, she was hired by the Star in 1968 to bolster suburban coverage.
Before long the Star assigned her to the State Capitol, where she covered the triumphs and shenanigans of Minnesota politicians until she retired in 1991.
"She was dogged," said Tom Triplett, who served as Minnesota's commissioner of both the finance and revenue departments under Gov. Rudy Perpich in the late 1980s. "She was graciously tenacious," said Cathy Wurzer of Minnesota Public Radio and co-host of Almanac on TPT.
"She had a unique way of extracting the information even if the source of the information didn't want to give up the whole story," said John Stanoch who chaired Perpich's 1990 losing bid for re-election. "She asked these open-ended questions, making you reflect whether she already knew the answer and was testing you.
"I had so much respect for her as a journalist. I never wanted to withhold from her because of her unique technique, and I wanted to earn and maintain her respect."
Wilson grew up on her parents' cattle ranch in Oklahoma, rode a pony to grade school and later graduated from the University of Oklahoma where she studied accounting. She moved to Minnesota when her husband, Cecil Wilson, got a job in the Twin Cities as an airline mechanic. The couple later divorced.