[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 75 (Thursday, May 12, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2740-S2741]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING WALLY HENDERSON
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, 2 weeks ago I lost a dear friend and my
hometown of Springfield, IL, lost one of its best. His name was Earl
Wallace Henderson, but everyone knew him as Wally. He was an acclaimed
architect who helped design Springfield's future while, at the same
time, preserving its priceless past as the hometown of President
Abraham Lincoln.
In the 1960s, Ferry & Henderson, the architectural firm he co-
founded, took on one of its most important projects: expanding
Illinois' historic old State capitol building to include underground
parking, room for the State historical library, and other modern
amenities.
The concept of architectural preservation was relatively at that
time, and Wally became one of its pioneering leaders. Expanding the old
State capitol involved taking the building apart piece by piece,
cataloguing and moving more than 3,300 stones to the Illinois
fairground, and then painstakingly rebuilding the structure over the
new parking garage and library.
Wally's decades of innovative work in architectural preservation
earned him admission in 2011 to the American Institute of Architects
College of Fellows, one of the highest honors in his field.
Interestingly, Wally became an architect almost by accident. What he
wanted to be all through high school was an astronaut. More to the
point, he wanted to be the first man to walk on the moon. This was back
in the late 1940s, which gives you an idea of Wally's ability to
imagine a future that few others could see.
Wally left Springfield in 1949 to study aeronautical engineering at
the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign. He was his parent's only
child, and the first person in his extended family ever to go to
college. When he came home for spring break during his freshman year,
his parents were so proud of their son, the college student, that they
invited a bunch of friends over.
One of the neighbors asked Wally, ``What are you studying?''
Wally told them, ``Aeronautical engineering.''
Another neighbor asked, ``So you want to build airplanes, do you?''
Wally replied, ``No, I want to be the first man on the moon.''
Years later in an interview, he recalled what followed.
``As those folks departed my mother said, `Here, sit down, your dad
and I want to talk to you for a moment.' ''
Wally sat down between his dad and his mom, whom he respected
greatly. His mother said, ``You know, it's alright to say that to your
dad and me about `wanting to go to the moon.' But everybody else thinks
you're crazy.''
That was the end of Wally's dreams of being an astronaut. He went
back to the university and asked a counselor what other school on
campus would accept the credits he had earned.
Fortunately for Springfield, Wally's counselor suggested
architectural engineering. That was the start of his long and
distinguished career.
Wally graduated from the University of Illinois in 1954, moved to
Indianapolis, and went to work for an engineering firm. Six months
later, he was drafted into the Army and sent to Korea. This was several
months after the ceasefire that ended the conflict. Wally was assigned
to an engineering battalion.
One day, a young Korean boy about 11 years old was polishing Wally's
boots to earn money for his family. The boy was telling Wally about his
hometown, a little village. He said it was the best village in the
world.
Wally said he started bragging about his own hometown, reached into
his pocket and pulled out the only coin he had, a penny with Lincoln's
image on it, and said, ``I'm from his hometown.''
The little boy had probably never traveled farther than 10 miles from
his own village, but when he saw that penny, his face lit up. To this
young boy, Wally said, ``Abraham Lincoln was everything.'' Right there,
3,000 miles from home, Wally listened as this Korean child told him the
story of the Great Emancipator.
[[Page S2741]]
Wally was stunned. He thought, ``Here I am, from Abraham Lincoln's
hometown. I lived nine or ten blocks from Lincoln's home, and this
child knows as much about Abraham Lincoln as I do.''
Over the next several decades, that would change. As an architect and
architectural preservationist, Wally would play a crucial role in
helping to preserve what is now called the Lincoln Home National
Historic Site and the Capital Complex. As I mentioned, he also helped
preserve and rebuild the old State capitol in Springfield, where
Abraham Lincoln delivered his famous ``House Divided'' speech, warning
that the Nation could not endure half slave and half free.
Coincidentally, it was also at the old State capitol that another lanky
lawyer from Illinois, Barack Obama, announced his candidacy for
President of the United States in 2007.
I was honored to serve with Wally Henderson on the commission that
helped create the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in
Springfield. We also served together on the Abraham Lincoln
Bicentennial Committee, which helped lead the Nation in remembering
Abraham Lincoln during 2009, the bicentennial of his birth.
Wally was a past president and longtime board member of the Abraham
Lincoln Association, a distinguished group of Lincoln scholars. In
2009, the Lincoln Association awarded him its Logan Hay Medal, for his
work in preserving and making more accessible buildings and landmarks
associated with President Lincoln's life.
In 2013, the Springfield Journal Register named Wally Henderson
Springfield's ``First Citizen.'' The ceremony took place, fittingly, at
the old State capitol State historic site, which Wally's firm had
helped to restore.
That Wally became such an important and cherished part of Springfield
is a bit of an irony. You see, when Wally Henderson left Springfield to
go to college, he vowed to himself that he would never move back.
After serving in Korea, Wally used the G.I. Bill to earn his master's
degree in architecture at the University of Illinois. He met his first
wife, Sally; they got married, and Wally landed a great job working as
an architect in Denver.
Then came the fateful phone call: Wally was contacted by a young
architect in Springfield, the brother-in-law of Wally's best friend in
high school. The brother-in-law's name was Don Ferry. He was working
for a Springfield firm that was designing hospitals, and they needed
another architect. Was Wally interested?
Wally came home, talked with Don Ferry, and left unimpressed. He went
back to Denver and finished work on a church that his firm was building
in the Rocky Mountains. The completed church was spectacular. At its
grand opening, Sally nudged Wally and said, ``You're leaving.'' She
knew that Wally needed another professional challenge. So, at the age
of 28, after 4 years as an architect in Denver, Wally packed up his
wife and baby and moved home.
He told Don Ferry that he would work with him, but he had conditions.
He told Don, ``You quit your job, I'll quit my job and we'll open an
office in Springfield because, by God, Springfield needs higher
education and a whole bunch of other things.''
His other condition: Wally said, ``We're not competing with anybody.
We're going to bring contemporary architecture to Springfield,
Illinois'' There were about a dozen architectural firms in town at that
time, but no one was doing much of anything new.
Wally Henderson and Don Ferry formed their own firm, Ferry &
Henderson Architects, in 1961. They started out in a one-room office
that contained two stools, a drafting table, and a telephone. They
worked together for decades and literally transformed Springfield.
They spearheaded projects including the Springfield Municipal Plaza,
the Willard Ice Building, and the building that houses the Springfield
Journal-Register.
One reason Wally had vowed never to return to Springfield was because
the town lacked a university. Ferry & Henderson helped rectify that
omission when their firm designed the Public Affairs Building, the
first permanent building at Sangamon State University, now the
University of Illinois at Springfield. Wally remained a strong
supporter of the university until the end of his life.
When Wally moved back to Springfield, the area surrounding the
Lincoln Home was run-down and nondescript. Wally helped stir
Springfield's civic pride and its resolve to take care of its priceless
legacy as Abraham Lincoln's hometown. I have been proud to have my
congressional and Senate offices in this restored area.
Just as that little Korean boy had enabled Wally to see Springfield
through new eyes, Wally helped others in Springfield to envision a
future in which the Lincoln Home, the old State capitol, and other
places that Lincoln loved would become the crown jewels of America's
Lincoln historic sites.
Last year, more than 233,000 people visited the Lincoln Home National
Historic Site in Springfield, up nearly 20 percent from the year
before. Those visitors spent more than $13.8 million at local
businesses.
My wife, Loretta, and I were fortunate to count Wally Henderson as a
dear friend and neighbor. We both extend our condolences to Wally's
wife, Brynn, and to their children and grandchildren, all of whom Wally
loved deeply.
When Abraham Lincoln left Springfield to start his inaugural journey
to Washington, friends from all over town came to see him off at the
Great Western Railway station. In what is now known as his Farewell
Address, the new President said: ``My friends, no one, not in my
situation, can appreciate my feeling of sadness at this parting. To
this place, and the kindness of these people, I owe everything.'' He
closed by saying, ``I bid you an affectionate farewell.''
Likewise, to my old friend Wally Henderson, who did so much to
preserve the legacy of President Lincoln and to enrich our hometown in
so many other ways, I bid you an affectionate farewell.
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