[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 115 (Tuesday, July 22, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H6583-H6584]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
23 IN 1--HONDO
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Gallego) for 5 minutes.
Mr. GALLEGO. Mr. Speaker, today, as we continue our journey through
the 23rd District, I would like to travel to a small town some 40 miles
west of San Antonio. That would be Hondo, Texas.
It is about 9.6 square miles of iconic America, and as you pass the
city boundary, you are kindly reminded by a sign: ``This is God's
country. Please don't drive through it like hell.'' That sign, erected
by the local Lions Club in 1930, deters speeders. It has been featured
on postcards; it has been the subject of many photos sent home by
tourists; and it even made the cover of National Geographic magazine.
I remember that sign even as a little kid, long before I-10 was built
and when Highway 90, through Hondo, was still the main thoroughfare--
the east-west highway--from L.A. to Florida.
Actually, the original sign just read: ``This is God's country. Don't
drive through it like hell,'' but as you might imagine, it was a
somewhat controversial sign for the 1930s. So, finally, in the 1940s,
the word ``please'' was added to soften the tone and to placate those
in town who found the sign a bit too harsh. Today, some 84 years after
its installation, that sign still serves as a not-so-subtle reminder to
slow down and, perhaps, to take a breath from the everyday rush of life
and enjoy the little things, like family and friends and God and
country.
Though settled in 1891, the Hondo area, which is now located in
Medina County, was first explored by Cabeza de Vaca in 1519, only some
27 years after Columbus arrived in the New World. It displaced
Castroville as the county seat, and Hondo shares a place in history
with the many early Americans who built this Nation through sheer sweat
and determination.
With the construction of the Galveston, Harrisburg, and San Antonio
Railway, which was built through the county from the east in 1881,
Hondo quickly transformed from a small, 25-resident settlement into a
trade and shipping center for agriculture and ranching. Hondo was the
scene of two bank robberies in the early 1920s. The crooks were the
famed Newton Gang, the most successful outlaws in American history.
Interestingly, both bank heists occurred on the same night.
Hondo, itself, was incorporated as a city in 1942, and at that time,
Hondo applied for a U.S. Army air training facility to be built there.
When our Nation was in need, they stepped up. The Hondo Army Airfield
was constructed with local funding in 89 days, and it opened on July 4,
1942. The airfield would become the largest air navigation school in
the world and would eventually train over 15,000 navigators to serve in
World War II.
That airfield still exists, and though it is no longer affiliated
with the U.S. military, today, it is a regional facility and is one of
the busiest small commercial airports in Texas. Mayor James Danner and
city leadership have done a phenomenal job of developing the airfield
into a center of transportation and commerce. If your business needs a
small airport near San Antonio and not too far from Eagle Ford Shale
country, check out the airport in Hondo.
In addition, that airfield is home to one of the largest and most fun
and entertaining air shows in Central Texas--and certainly the best air
show in all of Congressional District 23. Each year, thousands of
airplane enthusiasts descend on Hondo for the air show, which last year
featured more than 20 or so World War II-era airplanes. Another feature
of the air show was an exhibition called, ``Tora, Tora, Tora,'' a
smaller but incredibly well-done reenactment of the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor in 1941, a reenactment which was done using these vintage
airplanes. It is a great event to take your kids and your grandkids to.
Hondo is a town of living history as many of its residents are
descendants of the original 25 settlers. It is a town not lost in the
rush of everyday life, and like much of Texas' 23rd District, its
connection and commitment to the U.S. military run deep through its
veins.
I invite everyone to take a trip to Hondo and experience iconic
America. Remember, this is God's country. Please don't drive through it
like hell.
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