[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 87 (Thursday, May 23, 2019)]
[House]
[Pages H4152-H4153]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CELEBRATING THE LIFE OF GERALDINE ``JERRY'' EMMETT
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Phillips). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 3, 2019, the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Stanton) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
General Leave
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members
may have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks and to
include extraneous material on the subject of this Special Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Arizona?
There was no objection.
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, I rise today with my fellow colleagues from
Arizona to celebrate the life of a phenomenal woman. Geraldine Emmett,
``Jerry'' to most of us, was 104 years old when she passed away on
April 30, 2019.
Many Americans got the chance to see Jerry sparkle in 2016 at the
Democratic National Convention, where she served as an honorary
delegate and, along with Congressman Gallego, proudly announced our
State's votes for Hillary Rodham Clinton.
But her devotion to the democratic process started long before that.
Part of what captured the attention of the rest of the country during
the national convention is that Jerry symbolized just how far women in
America had come. She was born before the 19th Amendment granted women
the right to vote. She lived through the civil rights movement, the
women's liberation movement, and the women's suffrage movement.
She brought a sign to the convention that read ``Centenarian for
Hillary,'' a reminder that you can be politically active at any age.
Jerry represented the best of our State. She graduated from Northern
Arizona University, and in her first job she instructed children with
disabilities and chronic illness on the Navajo Reservation.
She served as a public schoolteacher in Arizona for 43 years and
actively promoted civic engagement and participation. She was a pillar
in Democratic politics in Arizona for decades.
Each of us here today had a chance to witness Jerry's fierce passion
up close. We wanted to take this opportunity to celebrate her life and
contributions to our community.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. O'Halleran).
Mr. O'HALLERAN. Mr. Speaker, today, I join my colleagues to remember
and honor a true patriot and someone I was honored to know and call a
dear friend, Jerry Emmett.
Jerry lived a long, full life beyond reproach. She was dedicated to
serving Arizona. She was a teacher for more than four decades. She was
a passionate advocate for the rights of women and underrepresented
groups. I mourned with our State when she passed away last month at the
age of 104.
Jerry inspired people from every corner of Arizona and across the
Nation, and that will be her lasting legacy.
I am in awe of what she has seen and what she has accomplished in her
lifetime. She witnessed history unfold, from the suffrage movement to
the nomination of the first female President candidate.
At the national convention, the world saw Jerry as we all in Arizona
knew her, full of life and zeal, and she proudly represented Arizona
for such a historic moment.
I will never forget the wisdom she shared with me over the years. She
was truly an inspiration to all of us, and I never left her side
without learning something important.
We come together today to mourn her passing but also to remember all
she has done for our State. My prayers are with her family and with all
the admirers and students she shaped and inspired over the years.
I will leave you all with a lesson she shared with her son Jim: No
matter what is going on at the time, as long as you keep hope and you
keep believing things will change and you are doing your best to help
change, it will change.
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentlewoman from Arizona
(Mrs. Kirkpatrick).
Mrs. KIRKPATRICK. Mr. Speaker, no woman or person I have ever known
has appreciated the right to vote quite like Jerry Emmett.
She was born at a time when being a woman meant being silenced. She
was raised at a time when women had to fight to be heard and worked 10
times as hard to be taken seriously. She aged to see women become
prominent and powerful, and she passed away the same year that we had
the most women elected to Congress.
I remember well the first time I met Jerry Emmett. She was very close
friends with the late Carolyn Warner, our former superintendent of
schools. Jerry was always the teacher. I was a newly elected State
legislator at a political event, and Jerry and Carolyn were there.
Carolyn Warner said: Do you have a card?
I said: Oh, I don't have them with me right now.
Jerry Emmett said: Always keep your cards in your pocket.
So, Jerry, this is for you.
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Arizona (Mr.
Gallego).
Mr. GALLEGO. Mr. Speaker, I know I speak for my colleagues when I say
that we all loved Jerry. How could you not love Jerry?
Her spirit and unwavering optimism and her love for our State and our
party made her the quintessential Arizonan. She lived to 104 years old,
and she really lived. She lived in a way that set an example for all of
us. She made every day count.
Her life spanned some of the momentous times in our Nation's history:
the Great Depression, the fight for women's suffrage, World War II, and
the civil rights movement.
In 1914, when Jerry was born, women did not have the right to vote.
Who could have thought then that a century later Jerry would announce
our State's delegates on the floor of the 2016 Democratic National
Convention for the first major-party female Presidential nominee in our
Nation's history. It was an honor to stand by her side that day, and it
is a moment I will never forget.
In her 104 years, Jerry saw our State and our country through some
tough times, but she never lost hope, she never lost optimism, and her
commitment to bringing about the change she believed in never wavered.
[[Page H4153]]
Her son Jim recalled that her biggest lesson was: No matter what is
going on at that time, as long as you keep hope, you keep believing
things will change, and you are doing you best to help change, it will
change.
Those words guided Jerry's life. Those words have inspired me and
should inspire us all as we keep fighting for the things we believe in.
We will miss you, Jerry.
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the members of the Arizona
delegation for those beautiful words about Jerry Emmett.
Now the rest of the country can see why she was such a treasure to
those of us in Arizona and what an honor it was today to honor her
life.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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