[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 22 (Thursday, February 9, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H664-H665]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMEMORATING ARIZONA'S CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Flake) is recognized
for 56 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. FLAKE. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to commemorate a milestone in
Arizona's history, the centennial of our great State. After nearly 49
years as a U.S. Territory, Arizona became part of the United States on
February 14, 1912.
Today Arizona is a bustling, contemporary oasis of more than 6
million people. Its natural wonders--the Grand Canyon, the Petrified
Forest, the Red Rocks of Sedona, the Painted Desert, coupled with
modern conveniences, most notably air-conditioning--draw millions of
visitors from around the world every year. But it wasn't always so.
Early settlers, ranchers, farmers, and miners had to wonder what
they'd gotten themselves into. Such was the case with my ancestors.
Allow me to tell a sliver of their story because it tells a little
about Arizona's history.
William Jordan Flake, my great-great-grandfather arrived in Arizona
territory in 1878. When he bought a ranch on the Silver Creek, he was
warned by the previous owners not to invite any other families because
the land and water would not sustain them. Fortunately, he didn't
listen. Soon the town of Snowflake was born, becoming the hub of
activity in what was then Arizona territory.
Not long after, William Jordan's son, James Madison Flake, was
deputized, along with his brother, Charles Love Flake, to arrest an
outlaw who had drifted into town. As they disarmed the outlaw, the
outlaw reached into his boot, drew a weapon, and shot Charles in the
neck, killing him instantly. James received a bullet in the left ear
before returning fire, killing the outlaw.
Just 3 years later, James Madison Flake sat at the bedside of his
beloved wife as she passed away, leaving him with nine children. ``Once
again I must kiss the sod and face a cloudy future,'' he poignantly
wrote in his journal.
{time} 1140
But like so many other pioneers who settled Arizona, he not only
faced the future, he shaped it. Along with raising these children and
many others that would come later, James Madison Flake involved himself
politically in the issues of the day. Notably, he tells in his journal
of attending numerous meetings and conventions around Arizona and
Colorado to promote the cause of women's suffrage. No doubt, he was
proud when, just after Statehood in 1912, Arizona became the seventh
State to approve the right of women to vote. Just a few years later,
the Nation followed with the 19th amendment to the Constitution.
James Madison Flake would be proud to know that Arizona has many
women
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legislators, has had a number of women Governors, and that the first
woman appointed to the Supreme Court, Sandra Day O'Connor, is a proud
Arizonan. He would surely be proud to know of Gabby Giffords, daughter
of Arizona and one of this Nation's enduring symbols of hope, who
served this Nation's House of Representatives so ably.
Over the past 100 years, Arizona has been home to a number of
colorful and transformative figures: Carl Hayden, Barry Goldwater, Mo
Udall, and John McCain.
With so many unsuccessful Presidential candidates, it's often joked
that Arizona is the only State where mothers don't tell their children,
Some day you can grow up to be President. In fact, mothers get to tell
their children something better: You have the privilege of being an
Arizonan.
One thing is certain. Because of the hard work and sacrifice of those
who have gone before, Arizona's next 100 years promise to be even
better than the first because in Arizona, the beauty of the sunset in
the evening is only eclipsed by the sunrise in the morning.
I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________