Background
Flores was born on August 12, 1900 in Hagåtña, Guam, and received all of his education on the island.
Flores was born on August 12, 1900 in Hagåtña, Guam, and received all of his education on the island.
He also founded the island"s first locally owned newspaper, the Guam Daily News (later becoming the Pacific Daily News), which was the only local newspaper until 1966. As Governor, Flores pushed for increased self-governance in Guam, resigning in 1961. After his, Flores founded other businesses and became involved in numerous community organizations.
He was a Knight of Saint Sylvester.
As a teenager, Flores worked for the United States Navy government in Guam as a messenger, and an operator at the Naval cable station. During World War I, Flores enlisted in the Navy, though he never saw combat.
Publishing career While in San Francisco, Flores opened a small print shop and began printing a four-page weekly newspaper, the South of the Market Street Tribune. The South of the Market Tribune turned a good profit until the Great Depression and a printing worker"s strike forced it out of business.
However, by the end of World World War II, Flores ran and published five newspapers.
Upon his return, he purchased the Naval newspaper publication Guam News for $37,000 in 1950, renaming it the Guam Daily News and making Flores the first local newspaper publisher in Guam. Later, Flores began publishing the Territorial Sun, a Sunday newspaper, and continued publishing for twenty years, when he sold the Guam Daily News to Chinese Ho for $1.2 million, who later sold it to Gannett Company. Personal life Flores was married to Angela Perez Flores and had one children named Edward.
President Eisenhower appointed Flores Governor of Guam in 1960, making Flores the first locally born Chamorro to hold the office.
His nomination followed the resignations of Richard Barrett Lowe and the subsequent acting governor Marcellus Boss. During his governorship, Flores pushed for Guamanian self-governance and a Delegate from Guam to the United States, and opened public health centers in various locations.
In addition, he aided in making the University of Guam a land-grant university. When John F. Kennedy, a Democrat, became president, Flores resigned on May 20, 1961 as a courtesy, after only one year in office.
He died on December 18, 1981 by his long illness at the age of 81.
In the 1960s, Governor.
In addition to his entrepreneurial work, Flores served on a number of boards, including charing the University of Guam Board of Regents and the Territorial Planning Commission, and a member of the Guam Chamber of Commerce, Young Men"s League of Guam, and the Elks Club.