Nellie Trent Bush

General Information

Nellie T. Bush, Nellie May Trent
Female
November 29, 1888
Cedar Co., MO, USA
October 27, 1963
Phoenix, Maricopa Co., AZ, USA
Parker Community Cemetery, Parker, La Paz Co., Arizona

Legislative Resolution

View Legislative Resolution File for Nellie Trent Bush

Biographical Information

The following is from the Legislative death resolution:

On the twenty-seventh day of October, 1963, at the age of seventy-five years, the Honorable Nellie T. Bush passed away in Phoenix, Arizona.

Mrs. Bush arrived in Arizona at the age of five years, in 1893, and thereafter her life was interwoven with the history of Arizona during its Territorial years and for the period of Statehood up until her death.

The accomplishments and exploits of Nellie T. Bush were outstanding, varied and distinguished.  Not only was Mrs. Bush a dedicated Mother, but she acquired honors in the field of business, as a ferryboat operator, as a justice of the peace, as a legislator, serving both in the House of Representatives and the Senate, as a lawyer, as a teacher, and as an airplane pilot.  She also found time to perform outstandingly in promoting civic and welfare activities.

The Honorable Nellie T. Bush was born in Cedar County, Missouri on November 29, 1888.  She graduated from Tempe Normal School [now Arizona State University] in 1908.  Thereafter, she taught school in Glendale and Mesa until her marriage in 1912.

In 1915, Mr. and Mrs. Bush moved to Parker where she operated a ferryboat business.  In 1918, she was elected to the post of justice of the peace.  In 1920, she was honored by the citizens of her legislative district when they elected her as a Member of the Arizona House of Representatives.

The citizens of her community continued to honor Mrs. Bush by repeatedly electing her to represent them in the Legislature.  Mrs., Bush served in the House of Representatives as a Member of the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, Tenth, Eleventh and Fifteenth Legislatures.  For the Twelfth Legislature, the people of her County elected her to serve in the Arizona Senate.

While in the Legislature, the Honorable Nellie T. Bush distinguished herself and served her State by serving on many Standing Committees.  At one time or another during her Legislative career she served as Chairman of such Standing Committees as Judiciary, County and County Affairs, Constitutional Amendments and Referendum, and Ways and Means.  Also during her career she served as a member on many other committees, thus giving her a voice and influence in affairs which were a cross section of the State.

The Honorable Nellie T. Bush studied law at the University of Arizona and was admitted to the State Bar of Arizona.  Also, Mrs. Bush learned to pilot her own plane and she was accredited with being the first woman in Arizona to pilot an airplane in connection with her business.

In addition to having held the position of Justice of the Peace in Parker, Arizona, Mrs. Bush also served as United States Commissioner, Town Attorney, Town Magistrate, and as a Member of the Board of Trustees.  She was an organizer of the Parker Woman's Club and she helped organize the Glendale Woman's Club.  Later, she was President of the Arizona Federation of Women's Clubs.

Many honors were bestowed upon Nellie T. Bush.  She served as a Member of the Arizona Colorado River Water Commission, the Colorado River Basin States Committee and the 1928 Arizona Code Revision Commission.

Additional Information

Arizona Women's Hall of Fame biography:

"Waves sometimes would be 8 feet high. Often when we were caught on the river in a storm, we'd have to throw overboard some of the ores. Many a time when the sailing was dangerous and I thought about my baby in the pilot house, I've uttered a little prayer, 'Now if you'll just let me get this kid off of here alive, I'll never bring him back on board again'. But you forgot about that after the danger had passed.”

Nellie T. Bush describing her experience as a riverboat pilot on the Colorado. As she prepared to take her seat in the Arizona Legislature in 1922, Nellie T. Bush told a reporter:

"Certainly I believe that a woman can be a success, both as a politician and a mother. I'm here to prove it.”

"I have a husband and a big five- year- old son, yet I do not feel that they are being neglected because of my work. My folks take good care of the boy while I'm here, and my husband is right back of me in my public career.”

"I am looking forward to the opening of the Legislature, and expect to have a good time at the capital. I am a firm believer in women going into politics, the more the better. They simply have to eliminate some of their old fashioned ideas regarding the difference in sexes.”

"With me, I expect nothing more from a man in politics than life gives another man. If he wants to smoke, I say, 'Go ahead and smoke. 'And if he wants to swear, I'll sit by and enjoy hearing him do it. If it doesn't hurt him, it certainly isn't going to hurt me."

No matter what Nellie Bush accomplished in her life, she seemed to approach it with a certain matter-of-factness, and if anyone asked her why she was doing it, we can almost hear her say, "Why not?" She was a schoolteacher, school principal, businesswoman, mother, ferryboat pilot, justice of the peace, coroner, legislator, lawyer, airplane pilot, state official and leader in woman's club activities.

Born Nellie May Trent on November 29, 1888, in Cedar County, Missouri, she was only five years old when her parents came to Arizona . She received her early education in Mesa schools and at Tempe Normal School (now Arizona State University ), where she was awarded a life teacher's diploma. She taught in Glendale and Mesa schools until her marriage in 1912 to Joe Bush.

The couple moved to Parker in 1915 after Mr. Bush, an electrical engineer, bought the ferry business on the Colorado River. The business consisted of one sternwheeler and one flat tunnel propeller boat. Mrs. Bush obtained her riverboat license and worked as a pilot for 17 years. For $3.50, travelers going between California and Arizona via the Needles-Parker highway could have their car ferried across the Colorado. The "Nellie T," as the ferry was named, could carry either six cars or 20 tons of copper ore, gold or manganese.

During her first year in Parker, Mrs. Bush often visited Phoenix. One incident that occurred while she was making the long drive alone reveals both her resourcefulness and her common-sense approach to life. Her car broke down and she found herself stranded on the dusty, desert road. Tinkering with the motor, she determined that the spring in the timer was broken. Undaunted, she took a stay from her corset, fixed the timer, and went on her way.

In 1918, Mrs. Bush became justice of the peace in Parker, a position she held for six years. In 1920, she was elected to the state Legislature, serving a total of 16 years, 14 years as a representative and two as a senator. Mrs. Bush's entry into law came about partly because of an incident in which she felt a banker had cheated her. He had accepted her money the day before the bank closed. Angry over her lack of recourse, she began to study law through a correspondence course. Later, she enrolled at the University of Arizona, where she studied from 1921 to 1924.

Describing her years at the University of Arizona (U of A), Nellie Bush said:

"We lived two blocks from the university campus, and two blocks from Wesley's (her son's) school. We would part each morning, my son going in one direction and I in the other. "He used to tell people, 'Mother and I are both in the first grade'.”
While at the U of A, Nellie Bush had some classes with Lorna Lockwood. On some occasions, the two women were asked to leave the classroom because "certain cases involving bad women" were being discussed.
"They wanted to keep women out of the classes when they discussed rape cases," Mrs. Bush said. "I asked if they had ever heard of a rape case which didn't involve a woman. They let us in after that."
During the summer, Nellie Bush took law courses at the University of California. After being admitted to the bar in both states, she worked in Parker as the attorney for the Santa Fe Railroad and, in addition, managed her own private practice.

In 1931, Mrs. Bush took up flying when her sixteen-year-old son, Wesley, became interested in airplanes.

"I realized that as a mother I could retain my son' interest, only as long as I could speak his language”, she said. "When he became interested in flying, I knew I had to know something about aviation. So we both took up the fascinating study."
They both obtained private licenses, and since the Bushes were the first to own an airplane in Parker, they built the town's first airport. Mrs. Bush would draw up legal papers in her Parker office and then fly to Yuma or Phoenix to handle business.

In 1932 Nellie Bush was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention when Franklin D. Roosevelt received the nomination for president. Active in the state debate over water rights, she served as a member of the Arizona Colorado River Water Commission, forerunner of the state Interstate Stream Commission. Later she served as a member of the Colorado River Basin States Committee, a seven state policy group which helped to advance many basin projects. In the 1930s, she was named the "Admiral of Arizona 's Navy" by Gov. Benjamin B. Moeur after the Arizona National Guard used her boats in a fight with California over Colorado River water rights. Of course, the entire navy consisted of the two boats operated by the Bushes.

Nellie Bush was also interested in women's issues and organized the Glendale Woman's Club and the Parker Woman's Club. She was President of the Arizona Federation of Woman's Clubs in 1955. In 1936 she ran for Congress but was defeated. Of that experience and others in her life, she once said:

"I haven't always won. I was defeated for U.S. Congress when I wouldn't go along with the Townsend Plan (an old age pension program) people, and I have been defeated several times for the state legislature race, but I always bounced back."

Mrs. Bush died at age 75 on October 27, 1963.

Employment

Occupation Title Years
Education/Library teacher
Lawyer/Judicial attorney
Government United States Commissioner
Lawyer/Judicial justice of the peace, Parker, Arizona
Lawyer/Judicial Parker Town Attorney
Lawyer/Judicial Parker Town Magistrate
Transportation/Lodging ferryboat operator
Transportation/Lodging pilot

Arizona Legislative Service

Session Chamber Party District City County Office Notes
5th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
5th Legislature, 1st Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
6th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 1st Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 2nd Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 3rd Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 4th Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 5th Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
8th Legislature, 6th Special House Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
10th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
10th Legislature, 1st Special House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
11th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
11th Legislature, 1st Special House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
11th Legislature, 2nd Special House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
11th Legislature, 3rd Special House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
12th Legislature, Regular Senate Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
12th Legislature, 1st Special Senate Democrat Yuma - (1912-30) (1931-66 Senate) Parker Yuma
15th Legislature, Regular House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma
15th Legislature, 1st Special House Democrat Yuma-1 - (1931-42 House) (1947-66 House) Parker Yuma

Sources

Birth: AZ Women’s Hall of Fame-1900 census AZ: Nov 1889-index Nillie (sic) Trent; Occupation(s): Legislative death resolution; Death: obituary:  "Nellie Bush, of Parker, Dies at 75."  Yuma Daily Sun, October 28, 1963; Cemetery:  Find A Grave Memorial 32716861 created by: Diane L, record added: Jan 07, 2009