December 7, 2011
Senator Barry Goldwater Imagines Arizona in the Year 2012
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Arizona's Grand Canyon as painted by Thomas Moran in 1908 (Library of Congress)
Next year Arizona will celebrate 100 years of statehood. Born in 1909, Senator Barry Goldwater was just three years old when Arizona became the 48th state in the Union on February 14, 1912. In 1962 — two years before he would get the Republican nomination for president (and ultimately lose to Lyndon B. Johnson in a landslide), Goldwater wrote an article for the February 14, 1962, edition of the Tucson Daily Citizen titled “Arizona’s Next Fifty Years.”
Imagining the world of 2012, Goldwater’s article looked at everything from where Arizona might get the water to support its rapidly growing population (the ocean seemed the most logical solution), to Arizona’s relationship with Mexico (he envisioned an open border). The article reads as a love letter to the state he grew up in and adored, while acknowledging that there may be some hurdles ahead.
I asked Jon Christensen his opinion of Senator Goldwater’s 1962 article. Jon is the executive director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University and he points out that, “Goldwater wrote in an era when the ‘new frontier’ was still something America believed in and yearned toward, before Kennedy was gunned down the next year in Dallas. Growth was the rocket fuel of that dream — population growth, economic growth, wall to wall houses filling the desert with nuclear families.”
Senator Goldwater opens the article by writing about his own family:
Fifty years from now, if things go well, I will be concerned only with heavenly surroundings, so any shortcoming or overstatements of this forecast will be of no concern for me. But my children, then ranging from 68 to 75 years of age, and my grandchildren and great-grandchildren of all ages, will be living in this heaven on earth — Arizona. So I looked into my crystal ball, determined to project the image of my native state 50 years hence with the accuracy of experience and the hope of love, trusting in the ability of man to restrain his bad side so that the good things I predict will be allowed to come true, and conversely to stimulate his good side so that man will make them come true.
Having come to that decision, I loosened my legs from the restraining ceiling of my desk and departed for another long walk across the floor of the desert which has been a part of my life.
Goldwater expresses concern about what the picturesque landscape of Arizona might look like after a growing population spreads into the more rugged and untouched areas of the state:
A desert rain, just passed, accentuated the pungency of the greasewood and I stopped my walk with the dreadful first decision that the man of 2012 would not be able to walk from his doorstep into this pastel paradise with its saguaro, the mesquite, the leap of a jackrabbit, the cholla or the smell of freshly wet greasewood, because people will have transgressed on the desert for homesite to accomodate a population of slightly over 10 million people. The forests will be protected, as well as our parks and monuments. But even they will have as neighbors the people who today enjoy hardships to visit them.

Senator Barry Goldwater in 1962 (Library of Congress)
Goldwater predicted that the city of Phoenix would be either the fourth or sixth largest city in the United States. The 2010 census places Phoenix as the sixth largest city in the country (with just under 1.5 million people) behind New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and Philadelphia. Though Arizona experienced steady population growth since 1962, that growth has slowed considerably in the last five years, which is most likely attributed to the recession and a bad job market.
But it will be the deserts that will support the majority of the new homes. Phoenix will have a population of about three million and Tucson will grow to about one and one-half million. Phoenix and Tucson will remain the two largest cities in the state, with Phoenix being either the fourth or six largest city in the United States.
However, spectacular increases in population will occur in Yuma, Flagstaff, Casa Grande, Sierra Vista and some yet unborn cities in the Harqua Hala Valley, near Cave Creek and east of Tucson. The growth of Glendale, Peoria and Avondale will parallel that of Phoenix proper, so that 50 years from now all of these cities will be contiguous with each other and with Phoenix, and will form a city complex not unlike the present city of Los Angeles.
When the book Inside U.S.A. by John Gunther was published in 1947, Arizona was still the youngest state in the Union. The book notes that “Only 329 square miles of its 113,909 are water, which means that water is by far its greatest problem.” Gunther writes that irrigation has made Phoenix lush: “Pass over in an airplane; the burgeoning green of the irrigated valley overlays the the desert as if painted there with shiny lacquer. This development derives from [the] Roosevelt Dam, which was one of the earliest federal reclamation projects.”
Goldwater explains in his article that he hopes water will be piped in from the ocean to alleviate the growing need for water in Arizona:
Long before this period of 50 years passes by, the large coastal cities will be getting their drinking [water] leasing the inland streams for inland consumption. But to augment our major sources of water we will also, long before 2012, be using water piped from the ocean for domestic purposes.
As farmland gives way to homesite in the central valley, farming will be done in an extensive way in the already developed areas around Yuma and in, as yet, undeveloped areas in the Centennial and Harqua Hala Valley lands with a much greater diversification of crops that we now have. Cotton, our main crop today, will dwindle in importance by the time 50 more years pass because more new man-made fibers will replace to a marked degree the need for cotton that we know today.
Goldwater understood that America’s move west would be even more pronounced in the latter half of the 20th century, and saw technology as a major factor in that growth. Christensen finds fault with Goldwater’s prediction about industry in Arizona: “What’s curious about Goldwater’s vision is that he thought the Arizona economy would be based on manufacturing. Instead Arizona made an economy fueled by service jobs, taken up by people who moved from the Rust Belt to the Sun Belt, to serve retirees following the same route, and by construction, to build those pastel Sun Cities where they would live.”
As the population center of the United States continues to move rapidly to the west, so will industry as to be near this new concentration of consumers. Arizona’s principal economic growth will be in the industrial field, with emphasis being on items of a technological nature. It will not be many years before industry will become an important part of the economies of most Arizona cities, whereas today it is more or less confined to a few.
Goldwater goes on to talk about Arizona government and interestingly believes that Indian reservations will radically transform, with the population of Native Americans growing rather than decreasing.
This industrial growth will, of course, depend upon the maintenance of a good governmental climate; but I expect the people of this state in the next 50 years will be able to maintain the same kind of good government in the state, county and local levels that the people of the first 50 years have to an almost complete degree.
Indian reservations as we know them today will no longer exist because the government will have deeded the lands to the Indians who now live on them. Indians will be with us in increasing instead of decreasing number, and as they become more and more educated, they will play a more and more important part in the life of Arizona.
Christensen is “intrigued by Goldwater’s view that Indian reservations would cease to exist, and Indians themselves would become just like other Arizonans; happy individual property owners. That was an old-fashioned view rather than a futurist vision by 1962.” Indeed, as an article in the Arizona Capitol Times noted earlier this month: “Anglos moving into the Arizona Territory during the late 1800s believed that the Native Americans already there should be acclimated into Anglo culture. During that time, Indian boarding schools were built and native children were removed from their homes and placed into these schools.”
Goldwater’s predictions of a wide open U.S.-Mexico border by 2012 may be the most surprising to contemporary readers, given the tenor of the current Republican presidential nomination debates, where candidates to various degrees have proposed tougher border controls to limit illegal immigration and narcotrafficking.
Our ties with Mexico will be much more firmly established in 2012 because sometime within the next 50 years the Mexican border will become as the Canadian border, a free one, with the formalities and red tape of ingress and egress cut to a minimum so that the residents of both countries can travel back and forth across the line as if it were not there.
Basking in the “frontier spirit” that Arizona has historically embraced, Goldwater calls on the rugged individualism that he sees as imperative to America’s progress:
Fifty years from now, even though Arizona’s population density will reach about 100 per square mile, there will still be lots of open space in which man can enjoy himself. Our watershed will improve, our forests will continue to grow, and even the Grand Canyon will be about three inches deeper.
Arizona will continue to be the haven for people who seek an outlet for initiative and a reward for work. The frontier challenges will exist then as they do today, for man’s progress never stops unless man stops it. Fortunately for our state, our men have always and will always want to go forward, not backward.
Goldwater finishes his article by writing about the generations to come that he’s sure will enjoy their lives in Arizona while he’s looking down from the heavens:
My children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren will be as happy living here as I have been during the first 50 years of statehood, because the people will remain warm and kind and thoughtful. And even though much of what we now know as desert will have disappeared, there will remain a sufficient amount of natural beauty to satisfy all of the desires of the 10 million people who will live here.
In fact, even though I hope to be on Cloud Nine or Ten or whatever they allot me, I am sure that 50 years from now I will look down on this delightful spot on earth and be envious of the people who call Arizona their home in the year 2012.
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A really fascinating read. Barry Goldwater sounds intelligent compared to the current republican party. His views on immigration are more radical than the democrats!
I live here in Arizona, on the border between Phoenix and Glendale (the border is right in my backyard, actually – makes interesting bedfellows of city services). Barry would be doing a spit-take if he could see what has become of some of the people, and especially of our state government. Yeah, here in 2012, most of the people here are “warm and kind and thoughtful” – unless you have brown skin (or are an athiest, or a democrat, or GLBT, or different in some other manner), and then you never know who is a jackbooted ultra-conservative/christian fascist/hatemongering neo-nazi/etc. But at least you know where Nickelbag Joe stands (ie, all of the above?)…
What a great article. Arizona is still the most beautiful state in the union – worthy of calling home. Goldwater had a kind of vision so lacking in politicians today. Imagine an open border between Mexico and Arizona.
I wish we could have cloned Barry. He was a man of great intelligence, integrity and patriotism. He “got” America and served in public office for all the right reasons. If only we had even one or two elected officials of his caliber in Washington today!
Too true, Crosh. Too true.
He was pretty spot on with the growth and population of cities. Most of Arizona’s economy is based on high tech manufacturing, despite what Christensen says. The open border and reservations part is very interesting. Goldwater was hoping Mexican immigrants and Natives would assimilate into American society, a very old fashioned view indeed.
As always when I set time aside, I take a few moments to try and re-read books written by Barry (my Uncle, about Barry and our family and the contemporaries of his time.
I meet people daily who ask, “What would Barry say or think about an issue?”, or offer their “expert opinion” regarding Barry’s philosophies or position on issues. I learned at an early age two things about Barry.
1) When he was alive, I never spoke for him unless he personally asked me to do so, and then I stayed exactly on His message.
2) I listen and learned from my father, Barry’s brother Bob, that if people really wanted to know how and what he thought I should tell them to read his books and decide for themselves.
From a personal observation, Barry spoke his mind directly and with honest convictions based on his life’s experiences, love of Country and the people. If he disagreed with you or disliked your actions he let you know immediately and plain understandable language. He taught by example rewarding your successes and explaining and implementing the consequences of your failures.
He was not a perfect man; he was “one of us”. He had the courage and integrity to openly state his beliefs and the guts to shoulder the consequences of his actions. As I continue to re-read his books, I also (unfortunately) believe he was a political profit.
Barry conveyed his philosophies starting with “The Conscience Of A Conservative – MacFadden Capitol Hill Books -1960″, for the most part have come to past and still hold true today.
His message continues to predict our future based on our willingness to be held accountable for our own actions and responsibilities, and our personal determination to defend our god given rights as stated in the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights.
I will always remember Barry for the quick corrections he delivered when I screwed up and also the public chastisement I received from people when they though he screwed up. At the time it hurt, however, today I am grateful for those opportunities and to learn those lessons as I believe they made me a better man.
I fondly remember every conversation we shared, some verbal, some not, and the life lessons he taught me and continues to teach me every day.
More importantly I remember and cherish the liberties he, my father, mother and our forefathers sacrificed to build and protect that we (can) should continue to enjoy today. We do not suffer the poverty and destruction witnessed in Haiti, Iraq, North Korea, etc. nor do we suffer the crippling economies and riots of some of the European countries. We suffer from an American economy that “we the people” created. We need to change this now and put people back to work. – VOTE
In this time of the worst economic downturn in American history, we should recognize, remember and appreciate, that we still have more opportunity, support and yes, even wealth (be it educational or asset based) than our ancestors had over 200 years ago when they took “a leap of faith”, put their lives, family’s lives and personal fortunes on the line to brave the voyage to this new world to start again. How they did it without government assistance is unexplainable.
It is frightening to experience the quick (20 years in the making) and horrific downturn of our economy, lives and personal fortunes. It has caused some to proclaim “the End Is Nye”, personally I think those people are full of it and should shut up and go away.
When the people of Iraq were given the freedom to vote, their fingers were stained with paint proving they had voted. They voted in record numbers despite the possibility of becoming targets for terrorists who wanted to disrupt their attempts to start a new government “of the people”.
Today in America, primaries, school board, city elections, etc., are being determined by as little as 18% of the local voting population and we are not being targeted by terrorists for voting. Apathy, laziness, irresponsibility, there is no difference. – VOTE
Benjamin Franklin, when leaving the first Constitutional Convention, was asked by a woman, “What have you given us?” He replied, “A Republic, for as long as you can keep it”.
Like Barry, I have the utmost faith in the American people; left alone, we will survive and fix our economy and our lives, but only if we show the courage and convictions of our founding fathers and remember and honor the sacrifices of those who sustained, ensured and protected our freedoms. – GET OFF THE COUCH AND VOTE.
Senator Barry Goldwater, President Ronald Reagan, President Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., President Kennedy, who ever your past hero are/were are dead. But their courage and convictions live on through you, the most powerful person in the nation, perhaps the world, the American Voter. It’s time we put up or shut up. – VOTE
Don Goldwater
Barry Goldwater was an intelligent and moderate compared to the current Republicans. I grew up when he was our senator and lament the change in the Republican party as his leadership was lost.