Outstanding Handicapped Federal Employee of the Year


Outstanding Handicapped Federal Employee of the Year was an annual award given by the United States Civil Service Commission beginning in 1969, to recognize exceptional job performance "in spite of severely limiting physical factors." For the first few years, ten finalists were selected by a committee, from among the nominations from federal agencies, and one winner was named. Beginning in 1973, the ten finalists were honored without a single winner chosen.
Prominent finalists for this award included chemist Odette L. Shotwell, Army engineer Alice Chancellor, and John Fales, founder and president of the Blinded American Veterans Foundation. A 1986 recipient, LeRoy MItchell, explained to a reporter that "If there's any benefit to these awards after all, besides an ego trip for me, it would be that potential employers would realize that most office-type work is the kind of vocation anyone can handle with severe handicaps." Others expressed concern that "the use of an individual's physical condition as a basis for reward fosters separateness and inequality."

Award nominees, winners, and presenters, 1968 to 1973

This chart is complete, based on program from the 1973 awards presentation in 1974.
Award yearCeremony datePresenterFinalistsWinner
1968March 25, 1969Spiro Agnew
Robert E. Hampton
Katherine A. Niemeyer
Thomas J. Garrick
William S. Grayson
James A. Krueger
Lawrence P. Kuykendall
Neal V. Loving
Odette L. Shotwell
Paul F. Spence
Aubrey T. Tapley
Elwood Williams III
Katherine A. Niemeyer
1969March 19, 1970James E. Johnson
Harold Russell
Robert L. Smith
Jimmy D. Adams
Thomas S. Austin Sr.
Jay Justin Basch
Mrs. Francis B. Garcia
Ralph Harwood
Dorothy Hickey
Earl A. Miller
Philip P. Pepper
Magdalene Phillips
Robert L. Smith
1970March 25, 1971Pat Nixon
J. Philip Bohart
Alice Chancellor
William J. Gobert
Susan Gonzales
Pruett B. Helm
Kent H. McKnight
Eugene F. Murphy
Richard S. Sharp
Timothy A. Votaw
Leon G. Wichmann
Robert E. Wilkerson
Alice Chancellor
1971April 6, 1972Tricia Nixon Cox
Jayne Baker Spain
Shirley K. Price
Wallace E. Brooks
Donald F. Cudahy
Martha F. Elam
Thomas F. Linde
Edward A. Lusk
John B. McGinley
Bernard A. Perella
Patricia Porembski
Jack G. Lorts
Shirley K. Price
1972April 5, 1973Julie Nixon EisenhowerIrvin Hershowitz
Arthur R. Bietry
Lillian F. Freston
James J. Hazuga Sr.
Edmund H. Inselmann
Paul L. Kyle
Assunta Lilley
Jack O. McSpadden
Arthur H. Neill Jr.
Gwenyth R. Vaughn
Irvin Hershowitz
1973April 4, 1974Bob Dole
Jayne Baker Spain
Robert L. Bates
Edwin C. Boyles
William L. Brewster
Frank G. Chituras
Icy D. Deans
Howard J. Garling
Cheryl Lee Maloney
Oral O. Miller
John R. Stodgell
Russell C. Williams

Award finalists and presenters after 1973

This chart is currently incomplete, based mostly on announcements about individual finalists.
Award yearCeremony datePresenterFinalists
1974March 1975Howard Davis
Billy West
1975Edward V. Pope
1977October 6, 1977Rosalynn CarterSharon Hovey Wilkin
Robert Adams
Dennis Meyers
Christopher Branigan
Donna Pastore
1978Earl Brawner
1979October 4, 1979Eleanor Holmes Norton
Alan K. "Scotty" Campbell
G. Robert Hill
Donald R. Ames
Paul E. Bricker Jr.
Hilliard A. Carter
Carol A. Edwards
John J. Lacombe II
Theodore A. Nichols
Emily S. Ortt
A. Leigh Phillips
James R. Slagle
1980Jimmy CarterJohn L. Moser
Douglas Gower
Edward Sanders
1981William Gilliland Jr.
Robert A. Bottenberg
1982October 1982Caspar WeinbergerHumberto R. Yglesias
Eva Ball
1983Theodore Bridis
1986October 9, 1986LeRoy Mitchell
Martha Wells Usry
1988Sandra Drake