Her father, Charles D. Brower, was a United States Commissioner in the Alaska territory and her mother, Ahsiangatok
(Asiaŋŋataq), was Iñupiaq from the Barrow area. Her father originally moved to the Alaska to work as a commercial whaler and was the first white settler there. Neakok was born in 1916. One of ten children, she was sent to San Francisco, California at the age of 14 to attend high school and then attended the
University of Alaska. After graduation, she worked first in a hospital, and then as a teacher in a
Bureau of Indian Affairs school and a social worker. She married Nathaniel Neakok, a whaling boat captain who also worked at the
Barrow Airport, in 1940 and together they had 13 children and several foster children. , the couple had been married for over 50 years. Her oldest son, Bill, was mayor of
Utqiaġvik (then Barrow) in the 1970s. She died in 2004. In 1992
Margaret B. Blackman wrote her biography,
Sadie Brower Neakok: An Inupiaq Woman. In 2009, Neakok was inducted into the
Alaska Women's Hall of Fame. She was the first woman elder in her
Presbyterian church. ==Judicial career==