When Fairfax became incorporated in 1955, Virmorgan
Ziegler was elected village clerk. She later said she had misgivings about
running for elected office and that her mother was “highly opposed.” She credited her position as recording secretary for the Civic Association for her election, saying “I guess that’s why I was nominated for clerk.” Among her to-do items for
the village were street repairs and lighting, and developing a building code
and zoning ordinance. When the village needed a municipal building in 1958, she
drew up the floor plan.
It wasn’t long before Mrs. Ziegler began butting heads
with other village officials. Council passed a resolution to place a $1.4
million tax levy on the November 1956 ballot. Ohio law limited municipalities
to issuing bonds that were less than five percent of their tax duplicate.
Ziegler refused to certify the bond issue because it would exceed the five
percent limitation. An action to force her to certify the issue was filed by
Elsie Cribbet, Fairfax property owner and taxpayer (and wife of councilmember
Ronald Cribbet). The First District Court of Appeals ordered Mrs. Ziegler to
certify the issue, stating that the village’s indebtedness at the time the
bonds were issued would determine whether the sale would exceed the limit.
Another common comment about Mrs. Ziegler was that she handled the village’s
money as she would handle her own.
For the next two decades, Virmorgan Ziegler served as
village clerk with no opposition for the office. She went through a number of
losses and personal challenges during those years. On January 20, 1958, her
father John Lucus died. George Ziegler retired as editor and educational director
for Ohio National Life Insurance Company in 1968. Her mother Clara Lucus had a
stroke in 1973. On January 16, 1975, George passed away after a long battle
with emphysema.
In 1975, Mrs. Ziegler faced her first opposition for
village clerk and won by 39 votes. Clara Lucas had another stroke in 1976 and her
daughter placed her in a long-term care facility because she was partially
paralyzed. Mrs. Ziegler retired as Manager of Agents Licenses and Contracts for
Ohio National in February 1976. She cared for her mother, visiting her every
day.
In June 1976, the Cincinnati Enquirer ran a
profile of Mrs. Ziegler. She expressed her pride in Fairfax. The reporter noted
that “Talking about Fairfax brings out a warmth in her” and “She smiles easily
and often, appearing so unlike the stern, stoic type of personality she often
displays at council meetings. . . . Her eyes . . . are alive with awareness and
intelligence.” She said she hoped that village residents regarded her with
“respect and confidence and as an individual who has a deep, sincere interest
in the village.” However, she also acknowledged that she wasn’t everyone’s cup
of tea “because I am not a yes person and when I am on the other side of the
fence, so to speak, it’s because of my consideration of what is financially
beneficial to the village.”
We can see an example of her “deep, sincere interest in
the village” when she confronted someone “on the other side of the fence”
regarding a 1978 Cincinnati Post article about the financial challenges
of the MariElders, the senior citizens’ group in Mariemont. The reporter wrote
that the “MariElders draw members from lower income areas like Fairfax.” Mrs.
Ziegler took exception to this statement and in a letter to the editor wrote
that “to the residents of Fairfax it smacked of a derogatory nature.” She said
that the MariElders asserted that they made no such statement to the Post
but, regardless, had sent a letter to Fairfax village council to try to smooth
things over. She said that Fairfax residents were offended by the statement in
the Post article and it would “not be easily forgotten by those in
Fairfax.” You messed with Fairfax and, by extension, Virmorgan Ziegler at your
own risk!
As village clerk, she burned the midnight oil, working on
village business well into the night and on weekends, saying “I do whatever it
takes to get everything done.” At one point she estimated that she worked 250
hours a month. She handled village mail and phone calls, answered residents’
questions, kept village records, took the minutes at council meetings, and
served as clerk of the mayor’s court. She was all business at council meetings
and didn’t have much patience with councilmembers’ bickering. I have had occasion
to review some of Mrs. Ziegler’s council minutes, which are typed on
legal-sized onion paper with very rare typographical errors. They are detailed
and, despite her reputation for being outspoken, do not document her personal
opinions.
In 1979, the Cincinnati Post profiled Mrs.
Ziegler. Despite her tough exterior, she acknowledged that she had struggles
like anyone else, specifically in dealing with placing her mother in a nursing
home and her husband’s death. She said, “I had sweared that I would care for my
mother at home as long as I possibly could. And I was still having a hard time
accepting my husband's death. I'm only coming out of that now. . . . You know,
people carry so much inside. You may be suffering inside and no one knows it
for the longest time."
Discontent was brewing in her public life, though. In the
1979 election, councilmember Gary Hodge challenged incumbent Ronald Cribbet for
mayor. Cribbet had served on council from incorporation until he became mayor
in 1962 and served as mayor since then. Although Cribbet won the election in a
landslide, Hodge didn’t fade into the shadows. He continued to challenge the
old guard for years to come and Virmorgan Ziegler was a frequent foil.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the village and Mrs.
Ziegler ran afoul of the State Auditor’s office. The village’s annual reports were
sometimes filed late, financial reports to council were not being made on a regular
basis, accounting practices were found to be inefficient, and deposits of
village funds weren’t made on a daily basis, as required by law. On at least
three occasions, the village was fined $750 for the late reports. Despite these shortcomings, there were no
missing funds and no fraud. The Auditor’s office recommended that someone with an accounting background handle the record keeping. They also recommended that Mrs. Ziegler not handle both the
village clerk and clerk of mayor’s court positions, citing a conflict of
interest.
At the January 1982 council meeting, council unanimously
passed an earnings tax increase and a wage increase for village employees. Gary
Hodge didn’t attend the meeting, though, saying, “I have requested [financial] information and
I have not received it. My conscience tells me I cannot vote on such an issue
without my knowing complete figures which I requested . . . My absence from
this meeting is also a form of protest in the way that a duly elected
councilman has not been provided with the needed information." He further
stated that he would ask the State Auditor’s office to investigate why he was
not provided with the financial information. When a Cincinnati Post
reporter asked Mrs. Ziegler after the meeting if she had refused to provide
Hodge with financial information, she said, “I am not answering that question.”
On October 23, 1982, Mrs. Ziegler’s mother, Clara Lucus,
passed away after suffering a series of strokes over a number of years. She was
91 years old. During her mother’s final illness, Mrs. Ziegler had stepped back a
bit from her village clerk duties.
In early January 1983, council was scrambling to schedule
a special meeting because they had not yet passed a 1983 budget. If the budget
wasn’t passed quickly, village employees wouldn’t receive their paychecks. Gary
Hodge was the holdout, saying "I have been calling for financial reports
every month for the past 12 months, and have been refused. It would be
hypocritical for me to vote this month on appropriations when I still don't
have the financial report. The only thing I can do is apologize to the
employees that matters have come to this." Village employees did, in fact,
miss a paycheck, but the budget passed soon thereafter.
Later that year, Hodge and other residents turned in two
petitions to Mrs. Ziegler for filing with the Hamilton County Board of
Elections for the November ballot. One petition would force the village clerk
to prepare quarterly and annual financial reports. The other set forth
procedures for handling village expenditures. Both petitions were clearly aimed
at Virmorgan Ziegler and the issues found in the state audits. The petitions
were delivered to Mrs. Ziegler on a timely basis, but she filed them with the
Board of Elections one day late. Hodge and Michael Orchin, who was running
against Mrs. Ziegler for village clerk, accused her of intentionally filing the
petitions late. The Board of Elections
was split on whether to allow the issues on the ballot and Ohio Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown was the tie-breaker. Brown voted to strike the issues from
the ballot for late filing.
1983 was only the second time Virmorgan Ziegler was
challenged for village clerk. Her opponent, Michael Orchin, said “Current
officeholders have become unresponsive. The people at the core of village government
have been in power for so long that it has become stagnant and self-serving,
only concerned with their own views. . . . The clerk's office has assumed
responsibilities of other positions to the point that one person is running the
affairs of the whole village." Ziegler defeated Orchin by nearly 200
votes.
In June 1987, Ralph Metzger, who had served as village
treasurer since incorporation, passed away. In July, Mayor Ron Cribbet
appointed Mrs. Ziegler to the new position of clerk-treasurer. Later that year she
ran unopposed for the position of clerk-treasurer.
On May 3, 1990, Gary Hodge and other like-minded
residents submitted four petitions for the fall ballot. They were a little more
proactive this time, pushing to ensure that Mrs. Ziegler submitted them to the
Board of Elections on a timely basis. In early August, Hodge accused Ziegler of
waiting until the filing deadline of August 23, so if there were problems with
the petitions the petitioners wouldn’t have time to address them. Mrs. Ziegler
took offense and in a letter to council said that Hodge owed her a public
apology, saying, "Mr. Hodge has threatened my credibility, questioned my
responsibility, attacked my integrity and attempted to defame my
character."
And if those pesky petitions were not enough, the most
recent State Auditor’s report was in and it wasn’t good news. There were three non-compliance
citations, failure to file an annual financial report on time, not depositing public
funds on a daily basis, and failure to pay fines, forfeitures, and costs from mayor’s
court to the clerk-treasurer on a timely basis. The late filing citation had an
associated $750 fine, which Mrs. Ziegler paid herself. When asked why she
personally paid the fee, she answered, “that’s nobody’s business.” Mayor Ted
Shannon said that because there had been earlier fines for the same issues,
council told Mrs. Ziegler that she, not the village, would be responsible for paying
the fine.
Although early 1991 brought yet another conflict between
Ziegler and Hodge over a petition issue, Virmorgan Ziegler was to face the
biggest challenge in her public career that fall, when Kathy Rielage
successfully ran against her for the clerk-treasurer position. Virmorgan
Ziegler was the last of the original Fairfax elected officials to go, perhaps a
victim of her stubborn, controlling, take-no-prisoners reputation. Although she
still had a great number of supporters, most voters were ready for
change.
At the time she left the clerk-treasurer’s office, the Cincinnati
Enquirer published an article about Mrs. Ziegler. Mayor Ted Shannon said, "Everybody
knows Virmorgan. They either love her or hate her. She's got a heart of gold -
a really good person. She'd do anything in the world for you. But there's no
doubt where she stands on any item. She can be very abrupt and abrasive, and
some people take it wrong. That's just her way. People who really know her,
value her." He said her "good sense of humor doesn't always
show." She's "very opinionated" and "will stick to her guns
if she thinks she's right. But if you prove your idea is better, she'll support
you all the way." He further said, "The village is her family. Her
main concerns are with the welfare of the village."
In the article, Mrs. Ziegler admitted that she doesn't
"play ring around the rosy" with people. She said she didn't
understand why people perceived her, as the Enquirer wrote, as "contrary,
hateful, and hard to deal with.” She said, "If people think that, I'm
sorry. I don't mean to offend anyone. I don't smile every time you ask me a
question. But I'll give you the required answer - unadulterated. I have never
let people get close to me. I was raised as an only child and I was taught to
be independent and strong. Those things can have an effect on you."
50 residents attended Mrs. Ziegler’s final council
meeting as clerk-treasurer on March 19, 1992. Council proclaimed April 26, 1992
as Appreciation Day for Virmorgan Ziegler, with a celebration at the recreation
center.
Cincinnati Enquirer, March 27, 1992
However, Virmorgan Ziegler was not done serving in the
Village of Fairfax and not everyone was celebrating her. On April 1, 1992, Mayor
Shannon appointed Mrs. Ziegler clerk of mayor’s court. Gary Hodge and some other
residents pointed out a council policy of not appointing defeated candidates to
fill village offices. They looked at the appointment as hypocritical and circulated
a petition to prohibit Ziegler from holding any appointed village office unless
approved by voters. Mrs. Ziegler responded, "Since when can the populace
control the appointment of an employee by an executive? Gary Hodge has a
vicious hatred against me." Mayor Shannon agreed that he had the right to
appoint whomever he wanted as clerk of mayor’s court. Village officials said
the policy of not appointing defeated candidates to open offices was only for
elected offices and clerk of courts wasn’t an elected position. The issue would appear on the November ballot.
There were three other issues on the ballot that fall,
including one imposing term limits for elected officials to two consecutive
four-year terms with one four-year term out of office before a candidate could
run again. The issue included retroactive service. In November, the term limit
issue passed. The Ziegler appointment issue failed by only a few votes.
In honor of Virmorgan Ziegler, in 1992 the village dedicated Ziegler Park at
the north end of Southern Avenue, near the Swim Club. The park included a
playground, batting cage, and soccer field.
Ziegler Park today
The term limit ordinance did not dissuade Mrs. Ziegler
from filing as a candidate for village council in 1993. However, the Hamilton
County Board of Elections blocked her candidacy due to Fairfax’s term limit
ordinance. Mrs. Ziegler filed suit and her attorney argued that retroactive
term limits were unconstitutional. The Ohio Supreme Court agreed and her name
was placed on the November ballot. She won election to village council by a
narrow margin, placing fourth out of nine candidates.
In 1995, Ted Shannon ran for Columbia Township trustee
and didn’t pursue reelection as Fairfax mayor. The candidates for mayor that year were
Dirk Hammersmith, Gary Hodge, and Ziegler. Hammersmith won the election and
Mrs. Ziegler came in third with only 19 percent of the vote.
In 1997, she ran for reelection to village council, but
did not retain her seat, finishing fifth for four open positions. In November
1999, she ran again for clerk-treasurer. She was defeated by Bill Knabb. When
most people would be content to live out their days in peace and quiet, in 2001
at the age of 86, Virmorgan Ziegler ran unopposed for a village council seat.
She was over 90 when her final term was complete.
Virmorgan Lucus Ziegler died on May 18, 2008 at Hospice
of Cincinnati in Anderson Township. In addition to her service in elected
office, she was a longtime member of the Fairfax Civic Association, Fairfax
Presbyterian Church, Fairfax Senior Citizens and the Fairfax Swim Club.
Mrs. Ziegler created a scholarship at her death to be
awarded annually to a Fairfax high school senior, the John M. Lucus / Virmorgan
L. Ziegler Scholarship. My niece was the 2013 recipient and our family was quite
appreciative.
I suspect that most of us have known at least one person
like Mrs. Ziegler, despised by some people and admired by others. I remember a
co-worker in my younger days as a sales associate at McAlpin’s. Most people
didn’t want to work with her because she had impossibly high standards and was
bossy and opinionated. For some reason, she seemed to like me. Yes, she would
complain about, well, nearly everything, but would also regale me with
stories from her interesting, colorful past. As much as her associates didn’t want to deal with her, she had a flock
of loyal customers who didn’t want anyone else to help them.
I’ll say it again; people are complicated. Although there
is no excuse for rudeness or bad behavior, I wish we all would take the time to
try to understand each other and show others the grace we want them to show to us.