Richard “Dick” Carlson’s life began in uncertainty. Left at an orphanage as an infant, he moved through foster care before being adopted. His early hardships shaped him, but they did not define him. Instead, they fueled a life built on resilience, discipline, and purpose. As a teenager, he joined the Marines, setting the tone for a future marked by determination and service.
Carlson fought his way into journalism, public service, and national politics. Those who knew him described him not as someone chasing power, but as “a sharp thinker — a reader, a skeptic, and a man shaped by faith, discipline, and resilience.” He valued ideas over status and believed strong convictions came from careful thought.
At home, he brought intensity and meaning to daily life. He “didn’t just raise children — he trained young minds.” Dinner conversations became lessons in history, literature, and the repeating patterns of human nature. He encouraged curiosity and independence, teaching his sons to ask better questions and face difficult truths without fear.
Later, he found deep happiness in his marriage to Patricia Swanson. Their life together was filled with stability and laughter, and friends said she grounded him. After her passing, he carried the grief quietly but remained devoted to his family, showing strength and gratitude despite the loss.
In his final weeks, he chose clarity over comfort, surrounded by loved ones. He leaves behind “a legacy of endurance, honesty, and fierce love” — proof that a man can begin life unwanted and still leave it fully valued and deeply remembered.