[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 128 (Friday, July 28, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H6524-H6525]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY OF MELVIN HERBERT EVANS
(Ms. PLASKETT asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute and to revise and extend her remarks.)
Ms. PLASKETT. Mr. Speaker, it is with great pride that I speak on
behalf of the centennial anniversary of the birth of the Honorable
Melvin Herbert Evans.
This celebration of Governor Evans' 100th birthday is both timely and
symbolic. Evans was born in 1917, months
[[Page H6525]]
after the transfer of the Virgin Islands from Denmark to the United
States, when locals had no citizen rights and no mechanism for which
they could have their own elected representation.
A son of the soil, he was educated on St. Croix, valedictorian of his
high school class on St. Thomas, and in 1944 earned his medical degree
from Howard College of Medicine. He returned to St. Croix and was
eventually Commissioner of Health of the Virgin Islands.
In 1969, Evans was appointed Governor of the Virgin Islands by
President Richard Nixon, earning him the distinction of being the
territory's last appointed governor, but more importantly, the
territory's first Black native governor.
In 1971, he became the governor elected by the people of the Virgin
Islands after a 1970 law which allowed residents to elect their
governor.
In 1978, he was elected to the House of Representatives in the 96th
Congress. And after leaving Congress, he was an Ambassador to Trinidad
and Tobago.
Governor Evans personifies the evolution of the political maturity of
the Virgin Islands. His life and legacy symbolized not only the
extraordinary achievement of Virgin Islanders--given little but
striving and attaining much under the American flag--but also the
political growth and progress of our Islands from colonial rule to
self-governance.
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