[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 27]
[Senate]
[Pages 36051-36052]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                     IN MEMORY OF THOMAS B. MURPHY

  Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I rise on a sad occasion for me 
personally and for my State, but also in some sense a proud time for me 
to be able to acknowledge the life and times of Thomas B. Murphy.
  Last night, at 10 o'clock, in Bremen, GA, in Haralson County, Thomas 
B. Murphy died from the complications of a stroke that for the last 4 
years kept him, at best, semiconscious and in a very difficult state.
  But in those previous 79 years of life, he is probably the most 
remarkable political figure in the history of the State of Georgia. 
Elected speaker of the house in 1974, he maintained that position until 
2002--for 28 years--longer than any speaker of any legislature in the 
history of the United States of America.
  He was the son of a primitive Baptist preacher by weekend and a 
railroad telegraph man by day. He was a product of the Depression. And 
he was Irish. He was tough as nails but had a heart of gold. He was a 
Democrat through and through, and proudly stated his absolute distaste 
for any Republican.
  For 8 years of my 17 years in the Georgia Legislature, I was the 
Republican leader of the Georgia House. To give you an idea of what a 
minority is really like, I was 1 of 19 Republicans, and there were 161 
Democrats. I understood what being a minority leader was all about.
  Tom Murphy was a powerful, forceful leader. But from the day I met 
him, when I was first elected in 1976, to the last day I held his hand, 
this past April, by his bed in Bremen, GA, he was always fair, he was 
always good, and he did what was best for the State.
  Tom Murphy did not play golf. He did not play tennis. He raised 
tomatoes in his garden. His house is a modest brick ranch in Bremen, 
GA. His trade as a country lawyer was exceeded only by his skill as a 
politician. He never cared for money. He never cared for fame. He never 
cared for attention. His favorite day of the year was March 17, St. 
Patrick's Day, for which he would summarily adjourn the Georgia 
Legislature so he and his entourage could go to Savannah, GA, and be a 
part of the second largest St. Patrick's Day parade in

[[Page 36052]]

America, in Savannah, on St. Patrick's Day.
  His second favorite thing was to hold his grandchildren in his lap as 
he sat on the throne of the speaker of the house of representatives, 
and let them watch over his presiding of the Georgia House.
  But this common, tough, fine man did so much for our State it is 
almost difficult to describe. We would not have a Metropolitan Atlanta 
Rapid Transit Authority were it not for Tom Murphy. He delivered the 
rural vote for the urban city of Atlanta in 1974 to get mass transit 
and to raise the taxes to do it. If you ever watched the Super Bowl in 
the Georgia Dome, the Georgia Dome would have never been built were it 
not for Tom Murphy.
  As to the Georgia World Congress Center, there is not a Member of 
this Senate who has not been there because almost every convention in 
America goes through there once every couple years. It would never have 
been built were it not for Tom Murphy. Our rural roads and highways, 
the Governor's Road Improvement Program, would never have happened were 
it not for Tom Murphy.
  But of all the great legacies and edifices that will be named after 
him, and have been named after him, his legacy will live on not through 
buildings and institutions but through people because Tom Murphy cared 
the most about people. And he cared the most about people who were poor 
and people who were disadvantaged.
  Tom Murphy's legacy is the children who were born in poverty who came 
out of poverty and became successful because of the programs he put in 
place as speaker of the house. Tom Murphy's legacy will live on because 
of those who know, as a foster child or as a child in trouble, it was 
Tom Murphy who was there to give a hand up, not a handout.
  Tom Murphy will be honored this Friday in the State capitol, where he 
will lie in state, and where his funeral will take place--a State 
capitol where for 28 years, through five Governors, he ruled the State 
of Georgia--not in the sense of a ruler or a tyrant but in the sense of 
a proud man whose time and destiny came together in the great State of 
Georgia. I will mourn his loss for all I learned from him.
  I end my remarks by telling you about that day I sat by his bed this 
past April and held his hand. He could not communicate, but I knew he 
was awake. I said: Mr. Speaker, I am now in the U.S. Senate. And I just 
wanted to tell you I am a better man, and I probably got there because 
of the painful and wise lessons I learned from you.
  A tear came in his eye, and he squeezed my hand. I knew, as we 
communicated first in 1976, we communicated once again. And from the 
day I knew him in 1976, to the last day I knew him this year, I 
respected him, I honored him, and I loved him.
  Georgia appreciates the service Tom Murphy gave to all her people.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.

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