[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 75 (Tuesday, May 18, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S3902]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO RICHARD MOE
Mr. REID. Mr. President, today I wish to recognize Mr. Richard Moe on
the occasion of his retirement for the outstanding contributions he has
made during his half-century career in American politics and the
preservation of our Nation's rich heritage. On May 31st, he will retire
as the National Trust for Historic Preservation's seventh president
after 17 years of distinguished work and achievement. He will have been
the longest serving president since Congress chartered that
organization back in 1949 to protect some of the country's most
important historic places.
His legacy, however, is not just limited to a litany of successes in
the preservation of our most treasured historic and cultural resources.
That stewardship alone is an accomplishment beyond measure because of
the priceless value these places and objects provide us and subsequent
generations of Americans into posterity. In honoring Richard Moe's
decades of work, though, I would be remiss if I did not call attention
to his great devotion to public service as well. Some of those years
were spent right here in the Halls of the Senate when he worked for our
esteemed former colleague, Walter Mondale. It would be difficult to
understand his deep commitment to the Nation and its heritage, a
hallmark of his presidency at the National Trust, without mentioning
his dedication to serving the American people through those whom our
voters have elected.
A native of Duluth, MN, Richard Moe graduated with a bachelor of arts
degree in political science from Williams College in Massachusetts. He
began his career in politics as administrative assistant to Minneapolis
Mayor Arthur Naftalin in 1961 and then as administrative assistant to
Minnesota Lieutenant Governor A. M. Keith until 1966. He studied law at
the University of Minnesota and passed the Minnesota State bar in 1967.
That same year, he became financial director of the Minnesota
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, eventually rising to chairman, the
second youngest in DFL's history. He held that post until 1972, when he
joined the Washington office of Senator Mondale and served as his
administrative assistant. In 1977, Richard Moe became Vice President
Mondale's chief of staff and a member of President Carter's senior
staff where he undertook a number of special assignments on behalf of
that administration. Following those years at the White House, he
joined the Washington office of the New York law firm Davis, Polk &
Wardwell and became a partner.
In 1993, he was selected president of the National Trust and forever
changed the face of that important organization. Richard Moe's
leadership there has taken the organization and the historic
preservation movement into the 21st century. His first goal was to make
it financially independent and strong. A major portion of the National
Trust's funding used to come from the Federal Government. This is no
longer the case. The National Trust now adheres to his more
entrepreneurial focus on building relationships with private funders.
As a result, and through two capital campaigns, the organization's
endowment increased by $200 million during his Presidency.
He has broadened the National Trust's original congressional mandate
far beyond the red velvet cords of house museums and brought historic
preservation into the full and diverse spectrum of the national public
policy arena. When in 1993 the Manassas National Battlefield Park and
the surrounding countryside were threatened by an incompatible theme
park and commercial development, he rallied such opposition to sprawl,
poor planning, and the loss of our country's open spaces that the
proposal was defeated.
He has focused his organization's attention beyond the importance of
just protecting the historic America we know that was built after
Jamestown, and called attention to the earlier cultural and historic
treasures of the first Americans on our great public lands. And as our
national consciousness has turned increasingly toward protecting our
environment and conserving precious resources, Richard Moe has led his
organization's role in fostering a more sustainable country under the
simple but powerful message that preserving and reusing historic
buildings is the greatest form of recycling.
His passionate interest in history and especially the events of the
Civil War led to a deep and personal commitment to the restoration of
President Lincoln's Cottage just 3 miles north of this Chamber. Now,
solely as a result of Richard Moe's vision, this once forgotten ``Camp
David'' of President Lincoln, where one of our most respected and
celebrated Presidents lived and worked, is open to the public for the
first time.
In the midst of all these accomplishments, Richard Moe wrote a Civil
War history in 1993, ``The Last Full Measure: The Life and Death of the
First Minnesota Volunteers,'' and coauthored ``Changing Places:
Rebuilding Community in the Age of Sprawl'' in 1997.
In 2007, he was awarded the National Building Museum's Vincent Scully
Prize, which recognized his leadership in moving historic preservation
into the mainstream of public policy and expanding the public's
awareness of our heritage's stewardship. That same year he also
received the American Historical Association's Theodore Roosevelt-
Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service. Let me add to the many
acknowledgements such as these my gratitude to Richard Moe and that of
the entire Senate for his indelible contributions to our American
political life and for his unceasing care for our national heritage. I
know that even in retirement, he will continue to serve the people of
the United States and I wish him well.
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