Susie Parks
Susie Parks with children
Born(1895-10-22)October 22, 1895
DiedApril 22, 1981(1981-04-22) (aged 85)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Printer, Switchboard Operator, Waitress, Sheet Metalist

Susie Ashcraft Gregg Parks Kendrick (October 22, 1895 April 19, 1981) was the telephone switchboard operator of the New Mexico town of Columbus, who was responsible for alerting the National Guard during the Battle of Columbus, on March 9th, 1916. She was recognized and celebrated for her actions.[1]

The Raid

On March 9th, 1916, Susie was 19 years old,[2] five months pregnant and in her apartment at the back of the Columbus Courier newspaper office with her 15-month-old baby.[3] Her husband, G.E. Parks, was the publisher and editor of the Columbus Courier, and away for the night. Francisco "Pancho" Villa's spies who, upon inspecting the town the week before, did not locate the telephone switchboard, which was now housed in the Courier office due to a fire at telephone office two months prior.[4][5] Before the attack, Villa's soldiers cut the telephone line to El Paso, Texas but the line to Deming, New Mexico remained intact.[6] In the early morning hours of March 9th she placed the distress call to Deming and alerted Captain A.W. Brock, Commanding officer of 1st Company of the National Guard.[7][3] She remained at the switchboard until Villa's army was repelled back over the border, and she was relieved of her post at the switchboard by a 13th infantry cavalry soldier.[8][9] During the raid Parks was shot in the neck, and both she and the baby were covered in glass fragments from broken windows damaged by gunfire.

Early life

Susie Gregg (Born Susie Ashcraft Gregg, although she is often referred to as "Susan Parks" in print), began her early years in Kirkland, Washington. She was the youngest of seven children born to David Duncan and Eliza Jane Gregg. They traveled by covered wagon from Nebraska to Washington, Washington to Montana, then back to Washington State. At age 12, after her brother was killed by a log roll on Lake Washington, the family took a train to Columbus, New Mexico. She left school after the eighth grade. While in Columbus she rode her horse, hunted in the Columbus desert, and worked on the family homestead.

At age 17, she met Garnet E. Parks, a soldier assigned to the 12th Infantry at the Post of Columbus, and they married on February 6th, 1914.[10] He later bought the Columbus Courier and served as the Editor and Publisher.[11] Together they produced the paper, ran the print shop, and lived in an apartment in the back of the newspaper office. On January of 1916, a fire broke out at Burton's telephone office, which is why the switchboard was at the Courier newspaper office during Villa's attack.

Recognition

On August 27th, 1916, the wife of L. Bradford Prince, New Mexico's territorial governor, and the Daughters of the American Revolution recognized her for her heroism at the Crystal Theater in Columbus.[12] They presented her with a gold watch, and a 46 piece set of sterling silverware. The inscription read:[13][14]

Mrs. S. A. Parks in recognition of heroic devotion to duty, Columbus, New Mexico, March 9th, 1916. From Mary C. Prince and friends in New York

To her daughter, Gwenyth Parks, they presented a silver cup lined with gold and an inscription:

To Gwenyth Parks. Commemorating your mother's heroism at Columbus, N.M., March 9th, 1916 -from Mary C. Prince

It was reported that, upon his arrival from Fort Bliss, General John J. Pershing visited Susie at the Courier office to praise her for her heroism in remaining at her post throughout the battle. [15]

An Official Scenic Historic Marker was placed at the intersection of New Mexico Highway 9 and Highway 11 in Columbus by the New Mexico Historic Preservation Division in October of 2016.[16][17]

Later years

Susie and Garnet stayed in Columbus for several years after the attack on Columbus in 1916 and through the conclusion of the Punitive Expedition. In 1919, they traveled with their three children to Washington State where they established the Tenino Independent newspaper in June of 1922.[18] Garnet became ill and nearly died after a gallbladder surgery punctured his bowels.[19] When the puncture was discovered, he began to recover but was left with a morphine dependency that crippled him, and the family that had grown to five children. They acquired the Clackamas News in Estacada, Oregon[20] but the stress was too much. They separated in June of 1929 after the birth of their sixth child and before the birth of their seventh. They had planned for him to get help for his drug dependency, but soon afterwards her letters were returned, and she never heard from him again. She filed for divorce in August of 1930.[21]

Susie raised their seven children in Kirkland, Washington. She worked as a ferry boat waitress and as an aircraft sheet metal mechanic during World War II.[22] In 1946 she married Delco Kendrick[23] and the two spent their remaining years traveling the country, visiting their children and grandchildren, playing music, and square dancing.[24][25]

References

  1. "Susan Parks - Heroes in Telecom History". Telecommunications History Group. Telecommunications History Group, Inc. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  2. Renteria, Ramon (9 March 2016). "100 years later: Columbus remembers 'Pancho' Villa". Las Cruces Sun-News. El Paso Times. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
  3. 1 2 Welsome, Eileen (2006). The General & the Jaguar (1st Edition June, 2006 ed.). NY, New York: Little, Brown and Company. pp. 121–122, 168, 256. ISBN 978-0-316-71599-7.
  4. Naber, Kara (7 March 2016). "Columbus remembers: Switchboard operator signaled raid to rest of the world". The Deming Headlight. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
  5. McGaw, William C. (1988). Southwest Saga- the Way it Really Was!. Phoenix, Arizona: Golden West Publishers. pp. 125–126. ISBN 0-914846-35-3.
  6. Smith, Toby (Jul 28, 1981). "Brave Woman in a Border Town". Albuquerque Journal. p. 45. Retrieved Mar 25, 2018.
  7. Hopper, James (April 15, 1916). "What Happened in Columbus". Collier's the National Weekly: 32.
  8. Mahoney, Tom (1932). "The Columbus Raid". Southwest Review. 17 (2): 161–71. JSTOR 43466150.
  9. "Villa Attacks Columbus, N.M." The Deming Headlight. Newspapers.com. 10 March 1916. p. 1.
  10. Lewis, L.L. (February 13, 1914). "Parks-Gregg". Vol. 3, no. 35. Columbus Courier. p. 8.
  11. Parks, G.E. (September 4, 1914). "G.E. Parks Editor". Vol. 4, no. 12. Columbus, Luna County, N.M.: Columbus Courier.
  12. "Brave Little Woman Who Dodged Villa Bullets to be Honored Sunday". El Paso Herald. Aug 24, 1916. p. 12.
  13. Parks, G.E. (September 1, 1916). "Columbus Heroine is Recognized by Presentation". No. Vol. VI No. 11. Columbus Courier.
  14. "Mrs. Parks Rewarded". Arizona Republican. August 28, 1916.
  15. Howard Bryan (2 May 1981). "Survivor of Raid Dies" (digital Newspaper). Albuquerque, New Mexico: Albuquerque Tribune. p. 3. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  16. "Official Scenic Historic Markers". New Mexico Historic Preservation Division. Historic Scenic Marker Spreadsheet: New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. p. Data Line 42. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  17. "Columbus, New Mexico with the Colorado Traveling Ducks". Colorado Traveling Ducks. February 22, 2019. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
  18. Kilgore, Wilson (October 24, 1919). "Happenings in Columbus Worthwhile". Vol. 9, no. 22. Columbus Weekly Courier.
  19. Parks, G.E. (November 24, 1922). "Parks Goes to St. Peters Hospital". Vol. 1, no. 24. Tenino Independent.
  20. "Farmer-Printer". University of Oregon Archives: Eastern Clackamas News. December 16, 1920. p. 4.
  21. "Divorce Granted". Seattle Daily Times. August 13, 1930. p. 29.
  22. "Shipyard Hires More Women". No. Main 0300. Seattle Times. December 4, 1942. p. 30.
  23. "Notice of Intention to Wed". Seattle Times Archives: Seattle Times. June 19, 1946. p. 13.
  24. Glover, Darrell (19 May 1981). "PV Raid Eyewitness Wounded at Switchboard May 1981". The Deming Headlight. Newspapers.com. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. p. 5.
  25. "Susan Parks 1937". The Deming Headlight. Newspapers.com. 20 May 1937. p. 1.


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