Richard “Dick” Carlson’s life began in hardship and ended in hard-won peace. As an infant, he was left at an orphanage and spent time moving through foster care before finally being adopted. His early years were marked by struggle, but he refused to let that define him. He joined the Marines as a teenager and later fought his way into journalism, public service, and the demanding world of national politics.
Those who knew him best often 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. As a father, he brought intensity and purpose into everyday life. He didn’t just raise children — he trained young minds. Dinner conversations became lessons on history, literature, and the way human nature repeats itself across generations.
Even in difficult years, he stayed present, teaching his sons to be curious, independent, and unafraid of difficult truths. He believed the world made more sense when people asked better questions. He later found deep happiness in his marriage to Patricia Swanson, building a life filled with love, laughter, and stability. Friends said she grounded him and gave him a lasting sense of home. When she passed, the loss stayed with him, but he continued to show strength, gratitude, and devotion to his family, even while carrying that quiet grief.
In his final weeks, he chose clarity over comfort, surrounded by those who loved him. He leaves behind a legacy of endurance, honesty, and fierce love — proof that a man can begin life unwanted, and still leave this world fully valued and deeply remembered, with his story living on through the family he shaped.