Andrew P. Martin
Andrew P. Martin was an Arizona politician who served a single term in the Arizona State Senate during the 2nd [Arizona State Legislature]. He was known as the father of the Arizona National Guard, having organized and led the first company in the territory in 1910. With no formal education in pharmacology, he became a registered pharmacist, and grew his father's single drugstore to become the largest drugstore chain in Tucson, before selling it in 1954. He was also called the father of the University of Arizona College of Pharmacology, having led the drive to establish the school. In addition, he saw combat as an artillery soldier during World War I.
Personal life
Martin was born on September 13, 1886, at his parents' house on Camp Street in Tucson, Arizona, one of eight children. In 1896, he began working as an apprentice in his father's drug store, The George Martin Drug Company. He first attended the San Augustin Parochial School, before transferring to the Safford School. After Safford, since there was no high school in Tucson at that time, he attended the preparatory school at the University of Arizona, where he graduated in 1907 and entered the university. He graduated from the University of Arizona in 1910. While he never had any formal pharmacological training, he became a registered pharmacist in 1904.Martin served as a captain in the Arizona National Guard, commanding Company K of the First Regiment. He was the one who organized the company, the first National Guard company in Arizona. Upon the United States' entry into World War I, Martin enlisted and as a private was part of the first contingent from Arizona to leave for the war. He served in a field artillery unit and saw action in France and Germany, rising to the rank of sergeant. He participated in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel and the Meuse–Argonne offensive, and after peace was declared he was part of the U.S. occupation force in Germany.
In 1919, he organized the American Legion in Arizona, and established the first American Legion post in Tucson, becoming the State Commander. In 1929 he served on the committee which re-drafted Tucson's city charter. He was a member of the Civilian Defense Board, and was instrumental in getting Arizona to exclude part of the oath which stated to "forgive and pardon" those who had advocated the overthrow of the U. S. Government prior to 1941. He said that the phrase had been included by "some parlor pink" in Washington D.C. A Roman Catholic, he was an active member of the Knights of Columbus.
Martin died on January 27, 1969, in St. Mary's Hospital in Tucson. He had been in the hospital for approximately one month prior to his death.