VCC Magazine Winter 2020
V irginia C apitol C onnections , W inter 2020 14 That door opened to a winning campaign, and then to a job in the transition office. From there, Schaar made her own transition—to the Senate, working under Senate Clerk Louise Lucas (no relation to the current Senator). She was assigned quite suddenly when a predecessor resigned. “I survived under fire not knowing a single member of the Senate when I started” she remembers. Her title was “Engrossing Clerk.” That was back in the day of cut-and-paste—quite literally. (For you younger readers—that means we revised documents using scissors and glue.) After Ms. Lucas’ tenure, Schaar was administrative assistant to the Clerk of the Senate, the legendary Jay Shropshire. Mr. Shropshire was Clerk until Schaar succeeded him when he became Governor L. DouglasWilder’s Chief of Staff. In her role as Clerk, Schaar has countless responsibilities including records management, human resources, facilities management, technology management and other administrative duties for the Senate. She is working on the Women’s Monument, the Native American Monument, and the Public Safety Memorial. She was a key driver in the Capitol renovation project. “The Capitol project was the project of a generation,” she says. She has traveled the world representing not only the Commonwealth of Virginia, but the United States of America. She has met Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. (They didn’t shake hands because the Queen did not initiate a handshake.) Schaar, in short, has a front-row seat to history, and gives it the importance and dignity that it requires. Does she love each and every minute? “There are days,” she confesses honestly, “when it’s just the nitty gritty.” Schaar’s honesty extends to her heartfelt expression of her grief for the late and The Honorable Bruce Jamerson, the Clerk of the House of Delegates. “Bruce and I were together 38 years,” she says. “It was like a working marriage. We knew what the other was going to order for lunch.” Between them, they had 78 years of institutional knowledge. She said it took six weeks for her to drive home without crying, and she was honest enough to say that some of those tears were in anger. But meanwhile, her job, which is “a job I love,” she says, goes on. She continues to enhance the Capitol, particularly the Senate staff offices, decorating the walls with work of Virginia artists. She has artfully placed a quill pen on a Senate conference table. She has personally collected an extensive collection of china decorated with cardinals and dogwood that she plans to leave with the office one day. And she enjoys work outside of the Senate, too. She served on the University of Richmond Board of Trustees from 1990 to 1994. She spends time with her grandchildren. She goes kayaking (“not whitewater”). And she rescues animals. Last year, she and her sister found homes for 18 kittens. She has three rescue cats and one rescue dog of her own. All the players in Schaar’s life, from her parents, to her high school principal, to Bruce Jamerson, and all the good people in between, have left the Senate of Virginia in good hands. Bonnie Atwood is editor of Virginia Capitol Connections Quarterly Magazine . I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. —Robert Frost The choice could not have been easy for the young girl from Brunswick County, but she made the right one. Susan Clarke, now The Honorable Susan Clarke Schaar, was the oldest child in her family of five. She had just graduated from college, her mother had retired from teaching and her father had been diagnosed with cancer. But her parents did what parents do: they nudged their daughter out of the nest. Schaar had attended Westhampton College of the University of Richmond. At first, her major was English. Then she switched to history and found out about the oral exams, which were “not for me!” Political science became her field. She did student teaching, looking at becoming a history/ government teacher, but found out that most school systems wanted those teachers to be football coaches, too. Another “not for me” moment. “Coaching football wasn’t exactly my strong suit,” says Schaar dryly. Still, political science was a good fit. She loved studying civil rights. She wrote a paper on the rights of the Native Americans, never dreaming that one day she would have a big role inVirginia government and tributes to Native Americans, women, and minorities. Her interest in Native Americans stemmed from a cross-country trip when she was just a fifth-grader. She traveled with her uncle and his family, making their way out west, they stopped to visit Indian reservations. She talked with Native American children her own age, and these interactions made a lasting impression. After graduation from college, she was offered a teaching job with Brunswick County. And she would have taken it. But her parents said not so fast. “I don’t want you to take the job,” were the words Schaar remembers from her parents. Why? “We want you to see the world and then if you want to come home that is fine.” Her parents wanted her to spread her wings and see it for herself. Again—the choice could not have been easy. It was off to Richmond. She shared an apartment with three other young women. They say that success is the intersection of preparation and luck (and a lot of hard work). Her preparation was that year of typing class; her luck was DortchWarriner. Schaar (then young Susan) had signed up for a study hall her junior year of high school. Early in the semester, she was called in to the principal’s office. Mr. Jefferson Jones, the principal, reminded her that he knew her parents well. He knew everything. He knew, for example, that the family television was shut down very night at 6:30 p.m. for homework time. “Walter Cronkite was it,” recalled Schaar. And the wise Mr. Jones knew, too, that this student need not spend an hour in study hall. She should get a practical skill like typing under her belt. “Whenever I saw him after high school ,” she said, “I thanked him for that advice.” Typing came in handy when Dortch Warriner (then a lawyer, later a federal judge) called to send her down to an interview with a political campaign he was involved with. She interviewed to work typing contribution letters for the Mills Godwin campaign for governor of Virginia. She saw the typing class as her “foot in the door.” A Guardian of the Senate: The Honorable Susan Clarke Schaar By Bonnie Atwood This article originally appeared in the Summer 2011 issue of Virginia Capitol Connections Quarterly Magazine. V
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