Posts Tagged First Ladies

Pat Nixon

3 January 2012

Pat Nixon, wife of Richard Nixon (the 37th President of the United States), was the first First Lady to earn a graduate degree. She graduated from the University of Southern California and earned a teacher’s certificate and graduated with enough credits to gain the equivalence of a Master’s degree. Afterwards, she became a teacher, a job she continued to do during the first year of her marriage.

While being the United States First Lady, Nixon realized the difficulties some encountered during their White House tours. She created special tours for those who were visually, hearing and physically impaired, allowing them full access to the rooms. By doing so, Nixon made the White House handicapped-accessible. For non-English speaking vistors, she commissioned brochures and pamphlets to be written in a variety of languages that would cover the various rooms and the history behind the White House.

Among some of her other “firsts” as First Lady include the following:

  • In the fashion world she created her own mark by being the first First Lady to wear pants in public.
  • During President Nixon’s 1969 trip to South Vietnam, Pat accompanied her husband and in doing so becaming the first First Lady to visit a combat zone.
  • At game two of the 1971 World Series, Nixon threw out the ceremonial first pitch at the Baltimore Memorial Stadium. This made her the first incumbent First Lady to toss out a baseball for a major league team.
  • Finally, at the 1972 Republican National Convention, Nixon addressed the convention. While she was not the first First Lady to do so (Eleanor Roosevelt addressed a party convention during her time), Nixon was however the first Republican First Lady to do so.

Photo and information found at the National First Ladies’ Library website.

21 November 2011
“It isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn’t enough to believe in it. One must work at it.”
- Eleanor Roosevelt, the First Lady of the United States from 1933 to 1945

The West Wing

28 October 2011

Theodore and Edith Roosevelt and five of their six children (the oldest, Alice, is not pictured).

In 1901, Theodore and Edith Roosevelt moved into the White House along with their six children. They soon found the living and office space to be too small. A year after moving in, President Roosevelt started construction on a new office building, known today as the West Wing.

whitehouse.gov

Youngest First Lady

13 October 2011

"First Lady Frances Cleveland holds baby Esther, the first and only child of a president to be born at the White House. Esther was born on September 9 , 1893."

At the age of 21, Frances Cleveland (1864-1947) was the youngest first lady. She was also the only president’s wife to marry and give birth in the White House. Before their marriage, Grover Cleveland’s sister Rose Elizabeth Cleveland acted as the White House hostess.

The National First Ladies Library’s website.
Photo found here.

“Lemonade Lucy”

8 September 2011

First Lady Lucy Ware Webb Hayes’ (wife of 19th President Rutherford B. Hayes) nickname was “Lemonade Lucy” because she banned alcohol in the white house events, including state dinners.

Lucy Hayes,” National First Ladies’ Library.

13 August 2011

“The one thing I do not want to be called is first lady. It sounds like a saddle horse.”

- Jackie Kennedy Onassis

Photo via Life.