Sarah Edith Sonneman Agee (born January 2, 1946) is an American politician who served in the Arkansas House of Representatives from 1999 to 2005.
Her father, Emil Herman Sonneman, was the owner and operator of the Fayetteville Country Club and Razorback Golf Course.
In high school, she was a member of Quill and Scroll and the Choralettes, was a maid at the Colors Day Court and worked at the Campus Grill owned by her family.
After their wedding, he joined the U.S. Navy, stationed first at Pearl Harbor and then leaving Agree in Honolulu while he served in the Vietnam War.
They had two children and Agee soon became involved with the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) before being elected to the Prairie Grove School Board, where she would serve for nearly twelve years.
[3] Agee was appointed by Governor Mike Huckabee as deputy floor leader of the House of Representatives in the 2001–2002 session.
She was the co-sponsor of Act 269 of 2003, along with Senator Sue Madison, which created early voting hours for all primary, runoff and general elections.