first lady

first lady
1. (often caps.) the wife of the president of the U.S. or of the governor of a state.
2. the wife of the head of any country: the first lady of Brazil.
3. the foremost woman in any art, profession, or the like: first lady of the American theater.
[1850-55]

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Wife of the president of the U.S. Although the first lady's role has never been codified or officially defined, she figures prominently in the country's political and social life.

Representative of her husband on official and ceremonial occasions both at home and abroad, the first lady is closely watched for some hint of her husband's thinking and for a clue to his future actions. The wife of the president played a public role from the founding of the U.S., but the title first lady did not come into general use until much later, near the end of the 19th century. By the end of the 20th century, the title had been absorbed into other languages and was often used, without translation, for the wife of a country's leader
even in countries where the leader's consort received far less attention and exerted much less influence than did her counterpart in the U.S. Although unpaid and unelected, she is able to influence behaviour and opinion, and some first ladies have used their influence to affect legislation on important matters such as temperance reform, housing improvement, and women's rights.

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▪ United States title
Introduction
 wife of the president (presidency of the United States of America) of the United States.

      Although the first lady's role has never been codified or officially defined, she figures prominently in the political and social life of the nation. Representative of her husband on official and ceremonial occasions both at home and abroad, the first lady is closely watched for some hint of her husband's thinking and for a clue to his future actions. Although unpaid and unelected, her prominence provides her a platform from which to influence behaviour and opinion, and popular first ladies have served as models for how American women should dress, speak, and cut their hair. Some first ladies have used their influence to affect legislation on important matters such as temperance reform, housing improvement, and women's rights. Although the wife of the president of the United States played a public role from the founding of the republic, the title first lady did not come into general use until much later, near the end of the 19th century. By the end of the 20th century, the title had been absorbed into other languages and was often used, without translation, for the wife of the nation's leader—even in countries where the leader's consort received far less attention and exerted much less influence than in the United States.

The early years
 Because the framers of the Constitution left the chief executive considerable latitude in choosing advisers, he was able to seek counsel from a wide variety of friends and family, including his wife. The first president made decisions that highlighted the consort's role. When Martha Washington (Washington, Martha) (first lady from 1789 to 1797) joined President George Washington (Washington, George) in New York City a month after his April 1789 inauguration, she arrived on a conspicuous barge and was greeted as a public hero. The president had already arranged to combine his office and residence in one building, thus providing her with ample opportunity to receive his callers and participate in official functions. Although she refrained from taking a stand on important issues, she was carefully watched and widely hailed as “Lady Washington.”

      Abigail Adams (Adams, Abigail) (1797–1801), the wife of John Adams (Adams, John), enlarged what had been primarily a social role. She took an active part in the debate over the development of political parties, and she sometimes pointed out to her husband people she considered his enemies. Although she did not disdain the household management role that her predecessor had played (she oversaw the initial move to the new White House in Washington, D.C., in November 1800), critics focused on the political counsel she gave her husband, and some referred to her sarcastically as “Mrs. President.”

      Because Thomas Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas) (1801–09) was a widower during his presidency, he often turned to the wife of Secretary of State James Madison (Madison, James) to serve as hostess. Thus Dolley Madison (Madison, Dolley) had ample time (two Jefferson administrations and her husband's two terms, 1809–17) to leave a strong mark. With the assistance of architect Benjamin Latrobe (Latrobe, Benjamin), she decorated the president's residence (White House) elegantly and entertained frequently. Her egalitarian mix of guests increased her popularity. During the British assault on the White House in August 1814, near the end of the War of 1812 (1812, War of), she provided for the rescue of some of the residence's first acquisitions, which endeared her to many Americans and solidified the role of the president's wife as overseer of the nation's most famous home.

      Elizabeth Monroe (Monroe, Elizabeth) (1817–25), the wife of James Monroe (Monroe, James), appealed to elitists who insisted that the presidential family should illustrate “the very best” of American society, but she had few supporters among those who were more egalitarian. Although she helped her husband select furnishings for the presidential mansion, newly rebuilt after the British assault in 1814 (this furniture became prized possessions of later tenants), she entertained much less than Dolley Madison, and Washingtonians reacted by boycotting some of her parties. Louisa Adams (Adams, Louisa) (1825–29), the wife of John Quincy Adams (Adams, John Quincy), struggled with the same problem her predecessor had faced: how to deal with the tension already evident in American culture concerning whether the president's family should mix freely and live simply or reside in luxury and be revered from afar.

1829 to 1901
      The presidential candidacy of Andrew Jackson (Jackson, Andrew) illustrated how important the role of the president's wife could be. Rachel Jackson (Jackson, Rachel) did not live to see her husband inaugurated, but earlier she had been attacked by the press, with one newspaper questioning whether she was qualified to serve “at the head of the female society of the United States.”

      By 1829 the outline for the job of president's wife was clear: hostess and social leader, keeper of the presidential residence, and role model for American women. When the president respected his wife's opinion (as John Adams did), she could also function as political counsel and strategist.

      Between 1829 and 1900 many presidents' wives—such as Margaret Taylor (Taylor, Margaret) (1849–50), who was chronically ill, and Jane Pierce (Pierce, Jane) (1853–57), whose son had been killed in a train accident—sought to avoid public attention by withdrawing behind invalidism and personal grief. Their husbands, as well as other presidents who were widowers or bachelors, often turned over hostess duties to young female relatives (daughters, daughters-in-law, or nieces), whose youth gained them admirers and excused their lapses in etiquette or lack of sophistication. Among the handful of 19th-century presidential wives who did seek a public role, Sarah Polk (Polk, Sarah) (1845–49), the wife of James Polk (Polk, James K.), was well versed in the political issues of the day and was considered a major influence on her husband. Mary Todd Lincoln (Lincoln, Mary Todd) (1861–65), the wife of Abraham Lincoln (Lincoln, Abraham), though insecure in a visible role, prevailed on her husband to grant favours to friends and hangers-on. Julia Grant (Grant, Julia) (1869–77), the wife of Ulysses S. Grant (Grant, Ulysses S.), was an extravagant and popular hostess during the Gilded Age and was the first of the presidents' wives to write an autobiography, though it was not published until 1975.

      Before the Civil War the president's wife had remained a local figure, little known outside the capital, but in the last third of the 19th century she began to receive national attention. Magazines carried articles about her and the presidential family. With the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869, travel across the country became easier, and Lucy Hayes (Hayes, Lucy) (1877–81), the wife of Rutherford B. Hayes (Hayes, Rutherford B.), became the first president's wife to travel from coast to coast. This exposure, plus her association with the popular temperance movement and her own simplicity in matters of dress and decoration, contributed to her immense popularity. After journalists hailed her as “first lady of the land,” the title entered common usage. Following the production of a popular play, First Lady, in 1911, the title became still more popular, and in 1934 it entered Merriam-Webster's New International Dictionary.

1901 to 1953
      In the 20th century—as the United States began to play a greater role in world affairs, as the president assumed increasing importance both at home and abroad, and as women's educational and job opportunities improved—the role of first lady grew considerably. Edith Roosevelt (Roosevelt, Edith) (1901–09), the wife of Theodore Roosevelt (Roosevelt, Theodore), extended the role in two ways: first, by hiring a secretary who publicized her activities and, second, by overseeing major architectural renovations to the Executive Mansion, which was officially renamed the White House by her husband.

      Helen Taft (Taft, Helen) (1909–13), the wife of William Howard Taft (Taft, William Howard), was intensely political and ambitious for her husband, but she suffered a paralyzing stroke in May 1909 and for a year could not undertake public duties. Her major contribution as first lady was the planting of ornamental cherry trees in the capital. In 1914 her autobiography, Recollections of Full Years, became the first such book published by a president's wife during her lifetime.

      Ellen Wilson (Wilson, Ellen) (1913–14), the first wife of Woodrow Wilson (Wilson, Woodrow), lived in the White House only 17 months before dying of kidney disease, but she advanced the cause of housing reform by bringing together specialists and legislators at the White House and by conducting tours of slum areas. When Congress passed a housing bill at the time of her death, she became the first president's wife to have her name so prominently attached to legislation. Edith Wilson (Wilson, Edith) (1915–21), Woodrow Wilson's (Wilson, Woodrow) second wife, was an attentive companion to her hardworking husband but was decidedly less devoted to reform. At the end of World War I in 1918, she accompanied him to the peace talks at Versailles, France, becoming the first president's wife to travel internationally amid such publicity. After the president suffered a stroke in October 1919, she served as a vigilant gatekeeper, monitoring all his visitors and messages. Critics complained of “petticoat government,” though she later characterized her actions as simply watching over her husband's convalescence while making no major decisions herself. Historians remain divided over the exact nature of her role during this period.

      Florence Harding (Harding, Florence) (1921–23), the wife of Warren G. Harding (Harding, Warren G.), illustrated the extent to which Americans had come to accept that women—including first ladies—played an important role in public life. She had assisted in running her husband's newspaper in Marion, Ohio, and assumed a prominent social role when he went to Washington, D.C., as a U.S. senator in 1915. As first lady, she paid close attention to press coverage and kept the White House open to a wide variety of visitors.

      Although some of her predecessors had gone to college, Grace Coolidge (Coolidge, Grace) (1923–29), the wife of Calvin Coolidge (Coolidge, Calvin), was the first president's wife to earn a university degree. Her enormous personal popularity offset her husband's reputation for laconic dourness. Often photographed in glamorous gowns or with some of her menagerie of animals, she also made news by attempting (unsuccessfully) to refurbish the family quarters of the White House with furniture from the colonial period.

      Lou Hoover (Hoover, Lou) (1929–33), the wife of Herbert Hoover (Hoover, Herbert), held the same Stanford University degree as her husband, and the two had collaborated on the translation of an important mining textbook, but she distanced herself from the substantive decisions he made as president. Although she confined herself to domestic management and to leading widely approved causes such as the Girl Scouts and physical education for women, she set one precedent when she became the first president's wife to give speeches on national radio. Her effort to catalog White House holdings and to furnish one of the upstairs rooms as the Monroe Drawing Room foreshadowed later restoration efforts of her successors.

 Eleanor Roosevelt (Roosevelt, Eleanor) (1933–45), the wife of Franklin D. Roosevelt (Roosevelt, Franklin D.), entered the White House with grave reservations about undertaking the job of first lady, but, before she left, she set new standards for how her successors would be judged. First lady for longer than any other woman, she extended the limits on what unelected, unappointed public figures could do. Her husband's paralysis as a result of poliomyelitis suffered in 1921 led her to travel for him, and she often said that she acted as his “eyes and ears.” She was also motivated by her early exposure to reform movements and her feeling of responsibility toward others, gained from a family that had long been involved in liberal causes and that prominently featured its women as well as its men. In the 1920s her association with a network of politically powerful women helped to augment her zeal. Inspired by all these factors, she was an extremely active first lady, writing articles, giving speeches, and taking stands on controversial issues. Moreover, she was widely viewed as appealing to constituencies different from her husband's, including women, African Americans, youth, the poor, and others who had formerly felt shut out of the political process. Although she regularly disclaimed any influence, she was credited with gaining appointments to important posts for many individuals from these groups. Throughout her tenure she held regular press conferences, limiting attendance to women until the start of World War II, thus ensuring that news agencies would hire more women correspondents. Her continued participation in public affairs after her husband's death further underlined the prestige she held in her own right. As a U.S. representative to the United Nations, she helped to shape the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and secure its unanimous passage. She continued to be active in the Democratic Party in the 1950s, and in 1961 President John F. Kennedy (Kennedy, John F.) named her chair of his Commission on the Status of Women, a post she held until her death in 1962.

      The fact that Bess Truman (Truman, Bess) (1945–53), the wife of Harry S. Truman (Truman, Harry S.), could achieve enormous popularity as first lady and yet act so differently from Eleanor Roosevelt showed how malleable the role of first lady had become. Intensely private, she refused to hold press conferences and revealed little when she answered written questions from reporters. As a result, the extent of her influence on her husband is difficult to assess. After leaving office, President Truman said that he had talked over his most important decisions with his wife because “her judgment was always good,” but their daughter, Margaret, suggested that Bess Truman was not so closely involved.

1953 to 1977
      Mamie Eisenhower (Eisenhower, Mamie) (1953–61), the wife of Dwight D. Eisenhower (Eisenhower, Dwight D.), did not significantly change the role of first lady. Popular with many Americans for her down-to-earth style, she saw her first name attached to a hairstyle (“Mamie bangs”) and a chocolate fudge recipe. Her press conferences were limited to social matters, and, when she published an article before the 1952 election, she refused to take sides, telling readers to vote for her husband or for Adlai Stevenson (Stevenson, Adlai) but to “please vote.”

      Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy) (1961–63) was, as the wife of John F. Kennedy (Kennedy, John F.), the youngest first lady in 75 years. She gained enormous popularity at home and abroad because of her youth, her glamour and style, and her two photogenic young children. The first president's wife to name her own press secretary, she struggled to guard her privacy. Her White House renovation, which was aimed at restoring the mansion to its original elegance, gained wide approval. In 1961 she established the White House Historical Association, which later facilitated the mansion's official designation as a museum (1988).

      Lady Bird Johnson (Johnson, Lady Bird) (1963–69) had been a member of Washington society for nearly three decades while her husband, Lyndon B. Johnson (Johnson, Lyndon B.), served in the House of Representatives and the Senate. An efficient household administrator, she had also taken an active part in her husband's political campaigns, and during World War II she had briefly run his Washington office. By the presidential election of 1960, she was such a seasoned campaigner that Robert Kennedy (Kennedy, Robert F.) credited her with carrying Texas for the Democrats. In 1964, when her husband's popularity in some parts of the country was low because of his support for civil rights, she undertook a whistle-stop campaign through the South. After he won the presidential election that year, she spearheaded a program that encouraged Americans to do more to improve the appearance of their neighbourhoods and that resulted in the Highway Beautification Act of 1965.

      Pat Nixon (Nixon, Pat) (1969–74), the wife of Richard M. Nixon (Nixon, Richard M.), also had a long Washington apprenticeship, but she received little credit for her accomplishments in the White House. A dutiful consort, she traveled thousands of miles, giving speeches and greeting potential voters. She opened the White House to groups that had not been invited before—including the blind, who were permitted to touch the furnishings—and she staged special holiday functions for senior citizens. Her program to encourage volunteerism never really caught on, however, and her reluctance to discuss her role or highlight her achievements diminished her place in history. Nevertheless, she continued to be named one of the most-admired American women long after she returned to private life.

      Betty Ford (Ford, Betty) (1974–77), the wife of Gerald R. Ford (Ford, Gerald R.), often said that because she entered the White House in the wake of the Watergate affair (Watergate Scandal), which forced Nixon's resignation, she felt an enormous responsibility to be candid. During a press conference within a month of becoming first lady, she openly expressed opinions that differed from her husband's on several important issues, including abortion. A few weeks later, after undergoing a mastectomy for breast cancer, she insisted on telling the truth instead of concealing the matter, as some of her predecessors had done during their own serious illnesses. Following her example, many women went for medical examinations, a fact that, as she later wrote, made her realize the power of the first lady. Some of the interviews she gave, including one in which she discussed her teenage daughter's sex life, led to criticism, but, on balance, Americans approved of her openness. After she left the White House, her confessions of alcoholism and drug dependence won additional approval.

1977 to present
      Rosalynn Carter (Carter, Rosalynn) (1977–81), the wife of Jimmy Carter (Carter, Jimmy), broke new ground for first ladies in several ways. Eighteen months before the 1976 election, she began campaigning for her husband on her own. In 1977, soon after becoming first lady, she traveled to seven Latin American countries, where she met with political leaders and discussed substantive matters such as trade and defense. This marked a departure from the kind of “fact-finding” trips that Eleanor Roosevelt had undertaken, and, after encountering criticism, she confined future trips to ceremonial or goodwill missions. Nevertheless, she attended cabinet meetings when the subject of discussion interested her—the first president's wife to do so. She also made headlines by testifying in support of the Mental Health Systems Act before a committee of the U.S. Senate. After leaving the White House, she wrote First Lady from Plains, an insightful look at her husband's administration.

      Nancy Reagan (Reagan, Nancy) (1981–89), the wife of Ronald Reagan (Reagan, Ronald W.), insisted that she had little influence on her husband's decisions, but, before she left the White House, the New York Times wrote that she had “expanded the job of First Lady into a sort of Associate Presidency.” She was often credited with influencing personnel decisions (both in hiring and firing), setting her husband's travel schedule, and shaping his agenda. She was criticized for what many considered “elitist” social behaviour and excessive spending, though private donors footed the bills. Her early association with a foster-grandparents program brought little favourable attention. However, her self-deprecating performance at a private dinner for journalists in 1982 and her leadership in an antidrug campaign, “Just Say No,” increased her popularity.

      Barbara Bush (Bush, Barbara) (1989–93), the wife of George Bush (Bush, George), followed tradition in refusing to specify how her own opinions differed from her husband's, and she was enormously popular for her personal style. White-haired and full-figured, she laughingly reported that there were “a lot of fat, white-haired wrinkled ladies…tickled pink” to see someone like themselves in the White House. Her association with a campaign to increase literacy also won her admirers, and all the revenue earned from her best-selling book about her dog Millie was donated to the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.

 Hillary Rodham Clinton (Clinton, Hillary Rodham) (1993–2001), the wife of Bill Clinton (Clinton, Bill), entered the White House with a law degree, a successful career of her own, and connections to a large network of successful professionals, including other lawyers and activists. When she took an office in the West Wing of the White House (the first president's wife to do so) and was named by the president to head a task force on health care reform, many expected that she would carve out a substantive policy role for herself. Although the deliberations of the task force did not result in important legislation, they did highlight the first lady's power. After a group of physicians complained that she was not a “government official” and thus had no right to keep the task force meetings closed, a federal appeals court ruled in her favour, citing a long tradition of presidents' wives acting “as advisers and personal representatives of their husbands”; her appearance before five Congressional committees to discuss the recommendations of the task force focused attention on the leading role she had taken in health care reform. Her public pronouncements on foreign policy and her changing stance on several other issues were frequently criticized, and they sometimes even conflicted with positions taken by her husband's administration. But her social activism, her frequent trips abroad without the president, the interviews she gave before, during, and after her husband's impeachment, and her successful candidacy for a U.S. Senate seat from New York state in 2000 all highlighted the independent power that a first lady could attain.

      Laura Welch Bush (Bush, Laura Welch) (2001–09), the wife of George W. Bush (Bush, George W.), was less of an activist than her predecessor but more of a public figure than her traditional mother-in-law. She publicly disagreed with her husband's position on Wade (Roe v. Wade) (1973), the U.S. Supreme Court decision that guaranteed the legality of abortion (she supported the ruling, he opposed it); she also invited writers to the White House who had openly criticized her husband, and she agreed to testify before a Senate committee on education. In a more traditional vein, she organized a national book fair to promote literacy and to encourage Americans to use libraries, organized a foundation for American libraries, and devoted considerable time to comforting Americans after the September 11 attacks of 2001.

      Michelle Obama (Obama, Michelle) (2009– ), the wife of Barack Obama (Obama, Barack), was the first African American first lady. A successful lawyer and a mother of two young children, she was expected to put her own unique stamp on the role.

      Since 1789 the role of first lady has changed considerably. Although still dependent on individual personalities, it has come to include involvement in political campaigns, management of the White House, championship of social causes, and representation of the president at official and ceremonial occasions. Because first ladies now typically publish their memoirs, which are viewed as potential sources of additional information about their husbands' administrations, and because the public is interested in these increasingly independent women in their own right, first ladies frequently remain a focus of attention long after their husbands' terms of office have ended.

Betty Boyd Caroli

First ladies of the United States
       First ladies of the United States First ladies of the United StatesThe table provides a list of the first ladies of the United States.

Additional Reading
Carl Sferrazza Anthony, First Ladies, 2 vol. (1990–91), explores the relationships among first ladies. Betty Boyd Caroli, First Ladies, expanded and updated ed. (2003), treats first ladies from Martha Washington to Laura Bush and discusses how their roles reflected changes in the status of women. Lewis L. Gould (ed.), American First Ladies: Their Lives and Their Legacy, 2nd ed. (2001), includes articles on first ladies written by experts.Betty Boyd Caroli

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Universalium. 2010.

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