[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 104 (Wednesday, June 14, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Page S2085]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Remembering Alice Sanger and Flag Day
Mr. YOUNG. Mr. President, I often speak of Hoosiers whose service,
patriotism, and sacrifice capture the spirit we celebrate on civic
holidays. For Flag Day, however, I rise to share the story of a Hoosier
who didn't merely embody the occasion. She helped establish it, and she
made history too.
Alice Sanger played such an important part in Benjamin Harrison's
Presidential campaign in 1888 as a stenographer that he made her an
important part of his Presidential staff. So Alice left her home in
Indianapolis for Washington, DC, to become the first woman ever to
serve on a President's staff.
This historic distinction doesn't quite capture the breadth of
Alice's service to the President and to our Nation. Neither did her
title of ``clerk'' or contemporary reporters' descriptions of her,
which often dwelled on her looks and her clothes.
So let me share with you what this clerk did in the White House. It
is quite remarkable.
A renaissance woman who was skilled with a paintbrush and had an ear
for music, Alice could take dictation at 200 words a minute without a
single misspelling.
She had a discretion seldom seen in Washington--now or then--and she
was known as a ``jewel of secrecy'' in the White House.
Not only did she type President Harrison's annual address to
Congress, she was given sole responsibility of safekeeping it until it
was sent here to the Capitol.
She personally read through all of the President's and First Lady
Caroline Harrison's correspondence, and she answered much of it in her
own hand. During the late 19th century, no woman's signature was better
known in America than Alice's.
In 1893, after losing his bid for reelection, Harrison left the White
House but Alice remained. You see, she was so essential to the
executive branch's function that the new President, Grover Cleveland,
from a different political party, asked her to stay on.
In 1894, she moved to the Post Office Department, which was then a
significant Cabinet-level Agency. She was no less indispensable in that
capacity. For decades, she managed budgets and advertising. She kept
track of regulations and postal laws, and she assembled the 700-page
directive that guided the operations of every post office in America.
She was a masterful organizer. She planned war bond drives, donations
to the Red Cross, and holiday celebrations, including the one we mark
today.
Now, the idea of commemorating the day in 1777 when the Continental
Congress created our national banner was not her own. Celebrations of
the American flag were staged periodically around the country, dating
back to the 1860s. But in 1908, Alice, as part of her responsibilities
at the post office, planned and staged a grand celebration for Flag
Day.
The sound of bands and distinguished speakers lifted out of the Old
Post Office building's courtyard, where a giant American flag hung. In
the years that followed, other government departments joined in the
celebration with their own Flag Day festivities, in large part due to
Alice's efforts. States followed suit, many with input from Alice
herself, who advised local post offices on appropriate celebrations.
Presidents Wilson and Coolidge recognized Flag Day with
proclamations, and, in 1949, the 81st Congress passed and Harry Truman
signed legislation formally establishing its observance.
You see, there is some harmony between Alice's career and her work to
promote Flag Day. When we look up at the Stars and Stripes, we catch
America's reflection. It is a symbol of our ideals, after all. Wherever
it waves, on battlefields where we have defended it, alongside the
graves of those who have died for it, in front of the places where its
democracy lives--courthouses in our towns and statehouses in our
cities, the dome under which we meet, and from the homes across the
Republic for which it stands--our flag represents the promise of
freedom and self-government; that any man or woman can live their life
in pursuit of happiness. But it also is a reminder that the work of
honoring those ideals goes on.
It is fitting then that, on Flag Day, we remember Indiana's Alice
Sanger. This Hoosier served her country so faithfully in an era where
pathways for women to do so were so few.
So, on Flag Day, we raise a pair of salutes: one to Old Glory,
forever may she fly; and a second to the trailblazing spirit of
Americans like Alice, long may it live.
I yield the floor.