[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 162 (2016), Part 11]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page 14732]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        REMEMBERING DAVE HUTTON

                                 ______
                                 

                           HON. MARK SANFORD

                           of south carolina

                    in the house of representatives

                       Tuesday, November 29, 2016

  Mr. SANFORD. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in remembrance of Dave Hutton 
of Daufuskie Island, located in the First District of South Carolina. 
He died earlier this month doing what he loved--living life fully and 
at full speed. In this case, he was on a hunting trip with friends. He 
was only twenty-seven years old.
  In that vein, Mark Twain once observed that the fear of death results 
from of a fear of life, but someone whose life is well lived is 
prepared to die at any time. Dave was indeed an example of life 
robustly lived, and much of his time spent on this earth was in the 
service of others.
  A man of large stature and spirit, his presence was one that welcomed 
you and that could not be ignored. As a native of Daufuskie Island, it 
comes as no surprise that Dave was among those who remained behind to 
watch over it when Hurricane Matthew hit back in October. A member of 
the so-called ``Daufuskie 100''--the name for the number of residents 
who rode out the storm, he was someone that those on the island looked 
to as a leader. Indeed, when I last saw Dave, he was leading the 
cleanup effort from the driver's seat of his bulldozer.
  That was par for the course for him. He couldn't help but lead. Even 
as a toddler, Dave encouraged his mother to give the change to charity 
whenever they went out to eat, an early indication that a life filled 
with service was to come. Dave's story is one of leading by example, 
one of both talking the talk and walking the walk, and I think there is 
a lesson that all of us can learn from within those pages.
  In his memory, I would ask that we take a moment today for 
reflection, and pause in asking how we can live up to his example of 
leadership. For those of us who knew him, even in the briefest of 
life's moments, he will be missed. Accordingly, I want to offer my 
condolences to his mother, Martha, as well as to the other family and 
friends he leaves behind. Daufuskie has lost one of its strongest 
spirits. But inasmuch as Daufuskie is a heavenly place for all who are 
called to its shores, I look forward to landing at the ultimate 
heavenly place that calls all of us one day home--and seeing him there. 
Dave will be more than just waiting for us. Perhaps on a shinier dozer, 
he will have cleared a path for islanders and non-islanders alike. He 
will be giving perhaps a touch too much direction and leadership--but 
this indeed is the Dave of Dave.
  Until that reunion, Godspeed.

                          ____________________