[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 117 (Thursday, August 2, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5957-S5958]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO REPRESENTATIVE PAUL FINDLEY
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, today I wish to honor former Congressman
Paul Findley--a great American who served his country in war and in the
hallowed halls of Congress, a son of Illinois, a prolific writer and
Lincoln scholar, a former political adversary, and my now friend.
Paul Findley was born in Jacksonville, Illinois, on June 23, 1921.
And at 91 years of age, today Paul is as active and involved as he has
ever been. Paul earned a bachelor's degree from his beloved Illinois
College in his hometown in 1943, where he was inducted into the
prestigious Phi Beta Kappa society. After college, Paul served as a
lieutenant in the Navy in the Pacific Theater from 1943 to 1946. His
honorable service and that of the dwindling number of living Americans
who served during World War II--one of the most difficult periods in
our country's history is something we should all take time to reflect
on and thank them for.
After the war, Paul became president of Pike Press, Inc., in
Pittsfield. He spent several years as editor of this small town weekly
newspaper. In 1952, Findley lost a bid for the Republican nomination
for State senator--something he and I have in common, having lost our
first campaigns for public office--but it didn't stop either of us.
In 1960 Paul Findley was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives
representing the 20th Congressional District of Illinois. He served in
the House honorably for more than 20 years, until in 1982 a young
lawyer from Springfield and a long shot to win surprised a lot of
people, including many of his supporters, by unseating the incumbent
Findley. Though Paul Findley and I were opponents in that campaign, I
always respected him and his public service. Notwithstanding what is
often a bitter and rancorous climate of partisan politics, I am proud
to call Paul Findley my friend.
One of Paul Findley's greatest accomplishments during his long and
distinguished congressional career was his dogged, ultimately
successful effort to preserve a great American treasure--the
Springfield home of our beloved son of Illinois, Abraham Lincoln.
Strolling today through this historic neighborhood at the heart of
Springfield, as thousands of visitors do each year, it would be almost
inconceivable that preserving Lincoln's home was ever a matter of
debate. But it once
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was. Back in the 1950s, the site visitors see today looked very
different.
Where now-restored historic homes line a gravel street in a stately
and peaceful neighborhood, then stood souvenir shops surrounded by a
neighborhood that Paul Findley would later recall was, ``rundown and
decaying in all directions.'' The Lincoln home itself--what Lincoln's
own private secretary once called ``the precious heirloom of the
republic''--was then the property of the State of Illinois.
For years, developers had tried to encroach on the historic site with
the goal of exploiting the area for commercial opportunities. Some
wanted a theme park. Others tried to build wax museums or hotels or
buffet restaurants in close proximity. Still others had been trying
unsuccessfully to ensure the home's restoration and the preservation of
the historical integrity of the surrounding area. In Congressman Paul
Findley, those who wanted to honor this piece of history found their
champion.
Findley traces his own interest in this project back to a
presentation at a meeting of the Pittsfield Chamber of Commerce in 1955
well before he held elected office. At the meeting, a Springfield
resident presented a case for preserving the Lincoln Home and
developing the site commercially. While the plan for development never
got off the ground, the presenter did make a point that Findley never
forgot--that the Lincoln Home had largely been neglected compared to
other Presidential homes. This, Findley regarded as ``shameful, awful,
scandalous.'' It was in 1967, as the congressman representing the
district that encompassed the Lincoln site that Findley became directly
involved and took up the mantle of this effort. After years of lining
up local, state, and national support, Congressman Findley announced in
1969 at a Springfield dinner that he would introduce legislation in
Congress to make the site part of the National Park System. At that
dinner was New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, whom Findley had
successfully enlisted in the effort,
The late Senators Charles Percy and Everett Dirksen introduced
companion legislation in the Senate. The bills had the support of every
member of the Illinois congressional delegation. But even with all this
support, as those of us who have been around here long enough know, the
fight wasn't over. Money, as always, was an issue. People began trying
to raise private funds. Congressman Findley worked tirelessly to get
the attention of the relevant committee and subcommittee chairs--
Democrats held the majorities in both Chambers at the time. Among other
things, he invited key members to Springfield to tour the site after
which they usually agreed to support his efforts.
I have no doubt that the commitments of these members to support his
bill had as much to do with Findley's tenacity, passion, and
determination as it did the power of seeing the Lincoln Home in person.
Then the Nixon administration threw its support behind Findley, and
even asked that the bill be amended to fully authorize the
appropriation required for the site--so the private fundraising was
unnecessary. The House passed the bill first, and it enjoyed, as
Findley says, ``swift approval'' in the Senate we can't say that about
too many matters around here anymore. On August 18, 1971, years of
efforts culminated in a ceremony in the Old State Capitol in
Springfield, just blocks away from the Lincoln Home. With Congressman
Findley looking on, President Richard Nixon signed the Findley bill
authorizing the establishment of the Lincoln Home National Historic
Site.
Think about it, this was an effort championed by a Republican
Congressman, passed by a Congress controlled by Democrats, and signed
by a Republican President. It was a different time. One year after the
signing ceremony, then-President of the Illinois State Senate, Paul
Simon, signed legislation transferring the title for the Lincoln home
to the National Park Service.
Thanks to the leadership of Congressman Paul Findley and the many
local supporters of his efforts--including then-Springfield Mayor
Nelson Howarth, the first superintendent of the Lincoln Home National
Historic Site Albert Banton, the architect of the Lincoln Home Visitor
Center and early supporter of preservation efforts Wally Henderson, and
countless others--visitors to the site today can stroll the street
Lincoln once strolled and take in the neighborhood in much the same way
it would have looked to him more than 150 years ago.
The experience of visiting the Abraham Lincoln National Historic Site
will undoubtedly inspire generations of young Americans to serve their
country, just as Paul Findley has and as Abraham Lincoln did.
This is Paul Findley's legacy.
It is a legacy that forever will be intertwined with President
Lincoln--an honor that Paul richly deserves.
Throughout his 91 years on this Earth, my friend and this great
American, Paul Findley, has made an indelible mark on our State of
Illinois and our country--and he has not done yet.
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