[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 3 (Tuesday, January 8, 2019)]
[House]
[Page H231]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




         CELEBRATING 100TH BIRTHDAY OF HELEN BARBARA LIVINGSTON

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Michigan (Mr. Mitchell) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. MITCHELL. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to celebrate the 100th 
birthday of Helen Barbara Livingston, who lives in Macomb County.
  A person experiences a great deal in 100 years of life. In 1919, when 
she was born, Prohibition went into effect, the pop-up toaster was 
invented, unemployment was 1.4 percent--if you can believe that--and 
the Grand Canyon became a national park. Helen experienced the Great 
Depression.
  She has seen over 40 percent of the history of this Nation. She has 
experienced 18 U.S. Presidents, from Woodrow Wilson, when she was born 
in 1919, to President Trump. Suffice it to say, she has seen a great 
deal of change in national and local politics in her life.
  She was born in Niagara, New York, and came to Michigan at age 6 when 
her dad got a job, amazingly enough, in the auto industry at a Dodge 
plant in Hamtramck, Michigan--the reason so many people move to 
Michigan to build cars and trucks for America.
  Helen attended Hamtramck High School and was an incredible athlete. 
She was captain of the field hockey team and played tennis, where she 
never lost a match in 4 years.
  During Helen's senior year in high school, Eleanor Roosevelt visited 
her school to promote women in sports, and Helen presented her with a 
bouquet of roses. A short time later, she received a handwritten letter 
from the First Lady.
  She met her husband working at Parke-Davis labs, and for their first 
date, they drove 5 hours to Hartwick Pines. Now, there is an effort. 
That was the start of a 59-year marriage.
  After being a stay-at-home mom for 12 years, when her kids were a 
little older, Helen started working at Macomb County Youth Home for 
juvenile delinquents. She worked there until she retired.
  Helen has been an avid golfer. She has two holes-in-one, most 
recently, when she was 80 years old. There are many golfers, including 
many golfers in this Chamber, who are envious of that achievement.
  Even as she got older, Helen continued to seek out fun. A few years 
ago, she was in a grocery store and ended up starring in a national 
Mike's Hard Lemonade commercial. To be honest, she didn't realize what 
Mike's Hard Lemonade was.
  I join her family, friends, and the entire community in celebrating 
an incredible 100 years of life and wish her many more.

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