Home > Carnegie Center > Arizona Women's Hall of Fame > Inductees > Riley, Mary V.
Mary V. Riley
1908 - 1987
Inducted in 1988

”All her long life Mary Riley has tried to help her people move
into the future without losing their Apache heritage.”
-- Joan Baeza, “God’s Country,” Arizona
Highways (June 1984)
When asked her birth date, Mary Riley often laughingly replied that she
had been “a Christmas gift.” Born at Fort Apache, Arizona,
on December 24, 1908, Mary Riley truly was a gift – not only to
her people, the White Mountain Apaches, but to all the people of her state
and nation.
Mary Riley attributed her successes in life to the early training she
received from Aadiihe, her maternal great-grandmother who was Apache, from
her aggressive paternal grandmother, Juana Velasquez, and from her Mexican-born
father, Jesus Valasquez. All of them stressed the value of hard work, and
they knew that making a living on the reservation was not easy. Mary’s
great-grandmother, Aadiihe, was used to spending days cutting wild hay,
loading it on horses and hauling it to the cavalry post at Fort Apache,
and gathering acorns and mesquite beans to supplement food for the winter.
One of Mary’s strongest memories was of Aadiihe’s gathering
the children around a campfire with a pan of parched corn for them to nibble
on while she talked. “If you put your arms to work, everything you
want is going to be at the tip of your fingers,” the grandmother
would say. “You don’t have to take anything from anybody because
you can do it yourself. Don’t be afraid, stand on your own two feet.
You’re as good as the next person … Don’t be afraid,
don’t give up. Just keep trying and you’ll get there.”
Grandmother Juana had come from Coahuila, Mexico, to the Apache reservation
with her two children, Mary’s father and his sister. Juana was able
to make her own way through her shrewd business sense, a trait Mary Riley
inherited.
Working all day long was common on the large ranch Jesus Valasquez, Mary’s
father, operated as she was growing up. Mary said that in addition to helping
with the 61 milk cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys, ducks, sheep, and goats,
her father had her doing many different things. Even as a little girl,
she was given the responsibility of handling money as she collected and
recorded ranch receipts. Her father told her, “Maybe some day you
will be on the tribal council, Mary. That’s why I’m going to
teach you to take care of your family and your people, too. I know that
you are not afraid of doing things for your people.”
Mary had to leave school when she was in the third grade because of the
debilitating influenza epidemic of 1918. To escape the contagion, it was
necessary for the Apaches to scatter their wickiups out from Fort Apache.
Jesus Velasquez provided the essential milk and other food for the outlying
areas, and it was necessary for Mary to go along with him to help with
the deliveries. But Velasquez continued his daughter’s education
by reading to her from newspapers and books. From him, Mary acquired her
lifelong interest in keeping up with the world through the newspaper. She
and her second husband, Peter Riley, encouraged all of their children and
grandchildren to get a good education. Many of their descendents are college
graduates. Getting an education was also the advice that Mary always gave
the young people of her reservation, and she was active in obtaining the
best school facilities possible.
In 1958, Mary became the first woman elected to the White Mountain Apache
Tribal Council. For twenty years, she represented her district and her
reservation. Whether at the tribal council in Whiteriver, at the state
capitol in Phoenix, or in Washington, D. C., Mary always proved that her
father had been right – she was not afraid to do things for her people.
Erect and dignified, dressed in her long, full Apache camp dress, Mary
was an imposing figure, but she succeeded by simply being herself. The
story is told that one time in Washington, D. C., the tribal delegation
had been waiting a long while to see Hubert Humphrey, but he was continually
surrounded by people. Not wishing to miss a vital opportunity to present
the Apaches’ cause, Mary pushed her way through the crowd, saying, “Excuse
me, please.” She linked arms with the statesman and his wife and
guided them smoothly over to the Indian delegates for an important meeting
which would benefit her people.
Mary Riley was a born leader with foresight to see what her Apache tribe
would face in the future and to devise ways of coping with those problems.
She worked hard with other members of the council to produce results – in
education, health, housing, and resources management. Mary, more than any
other individual, is given credit for bringing the Fort Apache Timber Company
(FATCO) to the reservation. It is wholly owned and operated by the
White Mountain Apache Tribe and carries an annual payroll of more than
six million dollars. Mary was proud of the fact that creation of the timber
company was not a government “handout,” but that the money
had been borrowed and paid back before the due date.
Another successful economic venture for the tribe was development of
a recreational enterprise which attracts thousands of vacationers to the
White Mountains every year. The tribe oversees twenty-six lakes, more than
1000 campsites along 420 miles of stocked stream, a casino, and the Sunrise
Ski Area.
Mary Riley was a religious woman whose personal philosophy enabled her
to get along with all people. Mary said, “All human beings are the
same to me … I was taught never to look down on people, to go on
ahead and talk nice about people. I like people. We can get somewhere if
we all stick together. That’s what I want.” It was Mary’s
custom to pray under the huge pine tree in her front yard, praying “in
the Indian way and in the Catholic way,” and never for herself, but “everybody
in the whole world.”
White-haired in her old age and “beautiful with the wisdom of her
people,” Mary Velasquez Riley was an inspiration to those who knew
her. The extent of her influence is evident in a sentiment often heard
since her death: “I feel fortunate to have known Mary Riley.”
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