|
Edgar Goyette was the man who made
things happen when leadership was badly needed,
and he deserves a paragraph to himself An adopted Tucsonan, he
arrived from Los Angeles in 1911 at the age of eighteen and enrolled
in the University of Arizona.
| Note:
Ed Goyette, Arthur
Brewer. Charlie Beach and Al Condron all went to Los Angles High School
(class of 1911) together. Goyette
and Brewer told
Condron and Beach "Tucson was the place to be". The rest is history. |
His talents as a leader were
recognized early. He was elected the first president of the student
body in 1913. As the years went by, he became more and more deeply
involved in welfare work and was ready for a top job when
the Depression arrived. A calm, friendly, efficient, industrious
man, he probably had more friends and fewer critics than any other
leader in Tucson’s history. He administered the government programs
from 1929 on, resigning from the Welfare Board in 1937, though he
continued to act for some time as secretary. From 1940 to 1960 he
was secretary-manager of the Tucson Chamber of Commerce, and when it
was time to step down from that strenuous job, he went to work as
publicity man for the Pioneer Hotel. He was the kind of man whom
everybody relies on and takes for granted. The Advertising Club
named him Man of the Year in 1958 for his work in bringing the Kitt
Peak Observatory to Tucson; the city
gave him a testimonial dinner in 1974, just before his death at the
age of eighty-two; and the city planners named a street for him on
the north side. These were small returns for his years of service,
but he would have asked no more. Only the old-timers remember him
now; nevertheless he left his mark on the city.
This website was designed for the
Tucson Rodeo Parade Committee inc.
by
Jake
Jacobson 2005 grandson of,
Albert H. Condron,
secretary of the "L
a F i e s t a de los V a q u e r o s" committee 1925
HOME...ABOUT
the PARADE...MUSEUM...GRAND
MARSHAL...COMMITTEE...CONTACT
US...
PARADE ENTRY...HELP
SUPPORT US...EQUIPMENT RENTAL...VOLUNTEERS
|