Point Udall (U.S. Virgin Islands)
Point Udall (17°45′20″N 64°33′55″W / 17.75556°N 64.56528°WCoordinates: 17°45′20″N 64°33′55″W / 17.75556°N 64.56528°W) at the east end of St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands is the easternmost point (by travel, not longitude) in the United States including territories and insular areas. It was named for Stewart Udall, United States Secretary of the Interior under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
A sundial known as the Millennium Monument was built above Point Udall for the New Year's celebration in 2000 — it marks the azimuth of the first U.S. sunrise of that year. From the monument an informal trail of moderate difficulty leads down to the point, composed of uplifted and rotated volcanic rock.
The westernmost point of the United States by travel, not longitude, which is in Guam, is also named Point Udall, in honor of Stewart's brother, Morris Udall. In a 1987 statement in regards to H.R. 2434, the legislation which led to the naming of the point in Guam, Denny Smith and Guam's nonvoting congressional delegate Ben Blaz said "If our legislation is approved, America's day would begin and end at a Point Udall."[1] It was referred to the House Subcommittee on Insular and International Affairs.[1] When Mo Udall died in 1998, President Bill Clinton issued a statement saying in part "It is fitting that the easternmost point of the United States, in the Virgin Islands, and the westernmost point, in Guam, are both named 'Udall Point.' The Sun will never set on the legacy of Mo Udall."[2] This was also noted in the Congressional Record by Rep. George Miller of California.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 Bill text and articles from the University of Arizona
- ↑ Weekly compilation of Presidential documents, 1998
- ↑ Congressional Record