Lady Bird Johnson
Lady Bird Johnson | |
---|---|
First Lady of the United States | |
In role November 22, 1963 – January 20, 1969 | |
President | Lyndon B. Johnson |
Preceded by | Jacqueline Kennedy |
Succeeded by | Pat Nixon |
Second Lady of the United States | |
In role January 20, 1961 – November 22, 1963 | |
Vice President | Lyndon B. Johnson |
Preceded by | Pat Nixon |
Succeeded by | Muriel Humphrey |
Personal details | |
Born | Claudia Alta Taylor December 22, 1912 Karnack, Texas, U.S. |
Died | July 11, 2007 West Lake Hills, Texas, U.S. | (aged 94)
Resting place | Johnson Family Cemetery |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | |
Children | |
Education | St. Mary's Episcopal College for Women University of Texas, Austin (BA, BJour) |
Signature | |
Claudia Alta "Lady Bird" Johnson (née Taylor; December 22, 1912 – July 11, 2007) was an American socialite and the First Lady of the United States as the wife of the 36th President of the United States, Lyndon B. Johnson from 1963 to 1969. She had previously served as the Second Lady of the United States from 1961 to 1963.
Notably well-educated for a woman of her era, she proved a capable manager and a successful investor. After marrying Lyndon B. Johnson in 1934 when he was a political hopeful in Austin, Texas, she used a modest inheritance to bankroll his congressional campaign and then ran his office while he served in the Navy.
As First Lady, she broke new ground by interacting directly with Congress, employing her own press secretary, and making a solo electioneering tour. Johnson was an advocate for beautifying the nation's cities and highways ("Where flowers bloom, so does hope"). The Highway Beautification Act was informally known as "Lady Bird's Bill." She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977, and the Congressional Gold Medal in 1988, the highest honors bestowed upon a US civilian.
Early life
Claudia Alta Taylor was born on December 22, 1912, in Karnack, Texas, a town in Harrison County, near the eastern state line with Louisiana.[1] Her birthplace was "The Brick House," an antebellum plantation house on the outskirts of town, which her father had purchased shortly before her birth.[2] She was a descendant of English Protestant martyr Rowland Taylor through his grandson Captain Thomas J. Taylor II.
She was named for her mother's brother Claud.[3] During her infancy, her nursemaid, Alice Tittle,[4][5] said that she was as "purty as a ladybird."[6] Opinions differ about whether the name refers to a bird or a ladybird beetle, the latter of which is commonly referred to as a "ladybug" in North America.[4] The nickname virtually replaced her first name for the rest of her life. Her father and siblings called her Lady,[7] and her husband called her Bird—the name she used on her marriage license. During her teenage years, some classmates would call her Bird to provoke her, since she reportedly was not fond of the name.[8]
Nearly all of her maternal and paternal immigrant ancestors arrived in the Virginia Colony during the late 17th and early 18th centuries, likely as indentured servants as were most early settlers in the colony. Her father, a native of Alabama, had primarily English ancestry, and some Welsh and Danish. Her mother, also a native of Alabama, was of English and Scottish descent.[citation needed]
Her father, Thomas Jefferson Taylor[9] (August 29, 1874 – October 22, 1960), was a sharecropper's son. He became a wealthy businessman, and owned 15,000 acres (6,070 ha) of cotton and two general stores. "My father was a very strong character, to put it mildly," his daughter once said. "He lived by his own rules. It was a whole feudal way of life, really."[5]
Her mother, born Minnie Lee Pattillo (1874–1918), loved opera and felt out of place in Karnack; she was often in "poor emotional and physical health."[3] When Lady Bird was five years old, Minnie fell down a flight of stairs while pregnant and died of complications of miscarriage.[3] In a profile of Lady Bird Johnson, Time magazine described Lady Bird's mother as "a tall, eccentric woman from an old and aristocratic Alabama family, [who] liked to wear long white dresses and heavy veils [... and who] scandalized people for miles around by entertaining Negroes in her home, and once even started to write a book about Negro religious practices, called Bio Baptism."[10][11] Her husband, however, tended to see blacks as nothing more than "hewers of wood and drawers of water," according to his younger son Anthony.[10]
Lady Bird had two elder brothers, Thomas Jefferson Jr. (1901–1959) and Antonio, also known as Tony (1904–1986). Her widowed father married twice more. His second wife was Beulah Taylor, a bookkeeper at a general store.[12] His third wife was Ruth Scroggins, whom he married in 1937.[13]
Lady Bird was largely raised by her maternal aunt Effie Pattillo, who moved to Karnack after her sister's death. She also visited her Pattillo relatives in Autauga County, Alabama, every summer until she was a young woman. As she explained, "Until I was about 20, summertime always meant Alabama to me. With Aunt Effie we would board the train in Marshall and ride to the part of the world that meant watermelon cuttings, picnics at the creek, and a lot of company every Sunday."[14] According to Lady Bird, her Aunt Effie "opened my spirit to beauty, but she neglected to give me any insight into the practical matters a girl should know about, such as how to dress or choose one's friends or learning to dance."[8]
Lady Bird was a shy and quiet girl who spent much of her youth alone outdoors. "People always look back at it now and assume it was lonely," she once said about her childhood. "To me it definitely was not. ... I spent a lot of time just walking and fishing and swimming."[15] She developed her lifelong love of the outdoors as a child growing up in the tall pines and bayous of East Texas, where she watched the wildflowers bloom each spring.[16]
Education
When it came time to enter high school,[15] Lady Bird had to move away and live with another family during weekdays in the town of Jefferson, Texas,[17] since there was no high school in the Karnack area. (Her brothers were sent to boarding schools in New York). She graduated third in her class at the age of 15 from Marshall Senior High School in the nearby county seat. Despite her young age, her father gave her a car so that she could drive herself to school, a distance of 15 miles (24 km) each way. She said of that time, "[I]t was an awful chore for my daddy to delegate some person from his business to take me in and out."[15] During her senior year, when she realized that she had the highest grades in her class, she "purposely allowed her grades to slip" so that she would not have to give the valedictorian or salutatorian speech.[4]
After graduating from high school in May 1928, Lady Bird entered the University of Alabama for the summer session, where she took her first journalism course. But, homesick for Texas, she stayed at home and did not return for the fall term at Alabama.[18] Instead, she and a high school friend enrolled at St. Mary's Episcopal College for Women,[19] an Episcopal boarding junior college for women in Dallas. It influenced her to "convert to the Episcopal faith," although she waited five years to be confirmed.[20]
After graduating from St. Mary's in May 1930, Lady Bird toyed with the idea of going back to Alabama. Another friend from Marshall was going to the University of Texas, so she chartered a plane to Austin to join her. As the plane landed, she was awed by the sight of a field covered with bluebonnets and instantly fell in love with the city.[21] Lady Bird received a Bachelor of Arts degree in history[22] with honors in 1933[23] and a second bachelor's degree in journalism cum laude in 1934.[24] She was active on campus in different organizations, including Texas Orange Jackets, a women's honorary service organization, and believed in student leadership. Her goal was to become a reporter, but she also earned a teaching certificate.[4]
The summer after her second graduation, she and a girlfriend traveled to New York City and Washington, D.C., where they peered through the fence at the White House.[4] Dallek described Lady Bird as having undergone a boost in her self-confidence through her years at the college. Her time marked a departure from her timid behavior in her youth.[25]
Marriage and family
A friend in Austin introduced her to Lyndon Baines Johnson, a 26-year-old Congressional aide with political aspirations,[26] working for Congressman Richard Kleberg.[4] Lady Bird recalled having felt "like a moth drawn to a flame".[27] Biographer Randall B. Woods attributed Johnson's "neglect of his legal studies" to his courting of Lady Bird.[28]
On their first date, at the Driskill Hotel,[5] Lyndon proposed. Lady Bird did not want to rush into marriage, but he was persistent and did not want to wait. Ten weeks later, Lady Bird accepted his proposal.[4] The couple married on November 17, 1934, at St. Mark's Episcopal Church in San Antonio, Texas.
After she suffered three miscarriages,[4] the couple had two daughters together: Lynda Bird (born in 1944) and Luci Baines (born in 1947).[29] The couple and their two daughters all shared the initials LBJ. Their daughters lived in the White House during their teenage years, under close scrutiny of the media.
Lynda Bird married Charles S. Robb in a White House ceremony. He was later elected as governor of Virginia and U.S. Senator. Luci Baines married Pat Nugent in the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and, later, Ian Turpin. Lady Bird had seven grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren at the time of her death.[4]
Early politics
When Lyndon decided to run for Congress from Austin's 10th district, Lady Bird provided the money to launch his campaign. She took $10,000 of her inheritance from her mother's estate to help start his political career.[30] The couple settled in Washington, D.C., after Lyndon was elected to Congress.[31] After he enlisted in the Navy at the outset of the Second World War, Lady Bird ran his congressional office.[31]
Lady Bird sometimes served as a mediating force between her willful husband and those he encountered. On one occasion after Lyndon had clashed with Dan Rather, then a young Houston, Texas, reporter, Lady Bird followed Rather in her car. Stopping him, she invited him to return and have some punch, explaining, "That's just the way Lyndon sometimes is."[32]
During the years of the Johnson presidency, Lyndon in one incident yelled at the White House photographer who failed to show up for a photoshoot with the First Lady. She consoled the photographer afterward, who said that, in spite of his feelings against President Johnson, he "would walk over hot coals for Lady Bird."[33]
Business career
In January–February 1943, during World War II, Lady Bird Johnson spent $17,500 of her inheritance to purchase KTBC, an Austin radio station.[2] She bought the radio station from a three-man partnership that included Robert B. Anderson, a future U.S. Secretary of the Navy and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, and Texas oilman and rancher Wesley West.
She served as president of the LBJ Holding Co., and her husband negotiated an agreement with the CBS radio network. Lady Bird decided to expand by buying a television station in 1952, despite Lyndon's objections. She reminded him that she could do as she wished with her inheritance.[4] The station, KTBC-TV/7 (then affiliated with CBS as well), was Austin's monopoly VHF franchise and generated revenues that made the Johnsons millionaires.[34] Over the years, journalists have revealed that Lyndon used his influence in the Senate to influence the Federal Communications Commission into granting the monopoly license, which was in Lady Bird's name.[35][36][37]
LBJ Holding also had two small banks; they failed and were closed in 1991 by the FDIC. But the core Johnson radio properties survived and prospered. Emmis Communications bought KLBJ-AM, KLBJ-FM, KGSR, and three other stations from LBJ Holding in 2003 for $105 million.[38]
Eventually, Lady Bird's initial $41,000 investment turned into more than $150 million for the LBJ Holding Company.[39] She was the first president's wife to have become a millionaire in her own right before her husband was elected to office.[2] She remained involved with the company until she was in her eighties.[4]
Second Lady of the United States
John F. Kennedy chose Lyndon Johnson as his running mate for the 1960 election. At Kennedy's request, Lady Bird took an expanded role during the campaign, as his wife Jacqueline was pregnant with their second child. Over 71 days, Lady Bird traveled 35,000 miles (56,000 km) through 11 states and appeared at 150 events.[4] Kennedy and Johnson won the election that November, with Lady Bird helping the Democratic ticket carry seven Southern states.[4]
Reflecting later, Lady Bird said that the years her husband served as vice president and she as Second Lady was "a very different period of our lives." Nationally, the two had a kind of celebrity, but they both found the office of Vice President to lack power.[40]
As the Vice President's wife, Lady Bird often served as a substitute for Jacqueline Kennedy at official events and functions.[41] Within her first year as Second Lady, she had substituted for Mrs. Kennedy at more than 50 events, roughly one per week.[42] This experience prepared Lady Bird for the following challenges of her unexpected years as First Lady.[40]
On November 22, 1963, the Johnsons were accompanying the Kennedys in Dallas when President Kennedy was assassinated; they were two cars behind the President in his motorcade. Lyndon was sworn in as president on Air Force One two hours after Kennedy died, with Lady Bird and Jacqueline Kennedy by his side.[43] Afterward, Lady Bird created a tape on which she recorded her memories of the assassination, saying it was "primarily as a form of therapy to help me over the shock and horror of the experience." She submitted a transcript of the tape to the Warren Commission as testimony. LBJ advisor Abe Fortas had made notations on her document to add detail.[44] In their plans for their trip to Texas, the Johnsons had intended to entertain the Kennedys that night at their ranch.[45]
In the days following the assassination, Lady Bird worked with Jacqueline Kennedy on the transition of her husband to the White House. While having great respect for Jacqueline and finding her strong in the aftermath of the murder, Lady Bird believed from the start of her tenure as First Lady that she would be unfavorably compared to her immediate predecessor.[43] On her last day in the White House, Jacqueline Kennedy left Lady Bird a note in which she promised she would "be happy" there.[46]
First Lady of the United States
As First Lady, Lady Bird started a capital beautification project[47] (Society for a More Beautiful National Capital). It was intended to improve physical conditions in Washington, D.C., for both residents and tourists, by planting millions of flowers, many of them on National Park Service land along roadways around the capital.[39] She said, "Where flowers bloom, so does hope."
She worked extensively with the American Association of Nurserymen (AAN) executive Vice President Robert F. Lederer to protect wildflowers and promoted planting them along highways. Her efforts inspired similar programs throughout the country. She became the first president's wife to advocate actively for legislation[2] when she was instrumental in promoting the Highway Beautification Act, which was nicknamed "Lady Bird's Bill."[4] It was developed to beautify the nation's highway system by limiting billboards and by planting roadside areas. She was also an advocate of the Head Start program to give children from lower-income families a step up in school readiness.[2]
Lady Bird created the modern structure of the First Lady's office: she was the first in this role to have a press secretary and chief of staff of her own, and an outside liaison with Congress.[39] Her press secretary from 1963 to 1969 was Liz Carpenter, a fellow alumna of the University of Texas. As a mark of changing times, Carpenter was the first professional newswoman to become press secretary to a First Lady; she also served as Lady Bird's staff director. Lady Bird's tenure as First Lady marked the beginning of the hiring of employees in the East Wing to work specifically on the First Lady's projects.[34]
During the 1964 election, Lady Bird traveled through eight Southern states in her own train to promote the Civil Rights Act,[39] at one point giving 45 speeches over five days.[34] It was the first solo whistle-stop tour by a First Lady.[32] President Johnson initially said he would turn down the Democratic Party nomination for president, having been unhappy during his service in President Kennedy's administration and believing the party did not want him. Although aides could not sway him, the First Lady convinced him otherwise, reassuring him of his worthiness and saying that if he dropped out, the Republicans would likely take the White House.[48]
Lady Bird continued her Whistlestop Tour in October 1964. She used a Braniff International Airways Lockheed L-188 Electra turboprop aircraft to conduct a multi-state tour, with stops in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Indiana, and Kentucky. Braniff dubbed the Lockheed Electra "The Lady Bird Special," after the ground Whistlestop Tour Train. "The Lady Bird Special" was painted on the sides of the aircraft, and a special route map of the tour was painted on the lower front part of the aircraft's fuselage near the main entry airstairs.[49] Lady Bird became the first First Lady to hold the Bible as her husband took the oath of office on January 20, 1965 - a tradition which continues.[50]
On September 22, 1965, Lady Bird dedicated a Peoria, Illinois, landscape plaza, President of the Peoria City Beautification Association Leslie Kenyon saying during the ceremony that she was the first presidential spouse "who has visited our city as an official guest in our 140 years of existence."[51]
On September 22, 1966, Lady Bird dedicated the Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona, fulfilling a goal that both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson had sought to accomplish. She said the dam belonged to all Americans amid an increasing concern for water that affected every American "no matter whether he lives in New York or Page, Arizona."[52]
In late-August 1967, Lady Bird traveled to Montreal, Quebec, Canada, to attend the Expo 67, a White House aide saying she had been urged by the President to travel there since his own trip three months prior.[53]
In mid-September 1967, Lady Bird began touring the Midwestern United States as part of a trip that one White House described as "mostly agriculture during the day and culture at night." President Johnson was then declining in support by farmers, months before a planned re-election bid.[54] Speaking to a crowd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on September 20, Lady Bird said problems within American cities were creating crime.[55]
In January 1968 at a White House luncheon,[56] Eartha Kitt, when asked by the First Lady what her views were on the Vietnam War, replied: "You send the best of this country off to be shot and maimed. No wonder the kids rebel and take pot." Kitt's anti-war remarks reportedly caused Mrs. Johnson to respond in advancement of education and social control despite war and led to a derailment of Kitt's professional career.[57][58][59][60]
Toward the end of Johnson's first term, Lady Bird was anxious for her husband to leave office.[61] In September 1967, Lady Bird voiced her concerns that a second term would be detrimental to his health. Health concerns may have been one of reasons why President Johnson decided not to seek re-election.[62]
In 1970, Lady Bird published A White House Diary, her intimate, behind-the-scenes account of her husband's presidency spanning November 22, 1963, to January 20, 1969. Beginning with President Kennedy's assassination, she recorded the momentous events of her times, including the Great Society's War on Poverty; the national civil rights and social protest movements; her activism on behalf of the environment; and the Vietnam War. Johnson was acquainted with a long span of fellow First Ladies, from Eleanor Roosevelt to Laura Bush. She was protected by the United States Secret Service for 44 years.[63]
Biographer Betty Boyd Caroli said in 2015 of Lady Bird that
She really invented the job of the modern first lady. She was the first one to have a big staff, the first one to have a comprehensive program in her own name, the first one to write a book about the White House years, when she leaves. She had an important role in setting up an enduring role for her husband with the LBJ Library. She's the first one to campaign extensively on her own for her husband.[64]
Writing in 1986, William H. Inman observed that Lady Bird was considered by some "the most effective First Lady since Eleanor Roosevelt", citing her battles against highway billboard forests, auto heaps, and junk piles as well as her support for American public landscapes maintaining beauty and sanity.[65]
Later life
Former President Johnson died of a heart attack in 1973, four years after leaving office.[34] When he suffered the heart attack, Lady Bird was in a meeting, and the former president had died when she reached him. She arranged for the body to lie in state at the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library and Museum the following day, and the body was laid to rest two days later. The couple's elder daughter Lynda said that God "knew what he was doing" when her father died ahead of her mother; she thought her father would not have been able to live without Lady Bird.[66] After his death, Lady Bird took time to travel and spent more time with her daughters.[67] She remained in the public eye, honoring her husband and other presidents. She entertained the wives of governors at the LBJ Presidential Library.[68]
In the 1970s, Lady Bird focused her attention on the Austin riverfront area through her involvement in the Town Lake Beautification Project. From 1971 to 1978, she served on the board of regents for the University of Texas System.[69] She also served on the National Park Service Advisory Board, and was the first woman to serve on National Geographic Society's Board of Trustees.[34] President Nixon mentioned her as a possible ambassador in a circulated memo, but never nominated her for office.[34]
In December 1973, after President Nixon established the Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Grove on the Potomac, he notified Lady Bird via a telephone call.[70]
In August 1975, after First Lady Betty Ford made comments on sex, Lady Bird expressed sympathy: "I know the pressures of being a First Lady, and I think maybe she got asked one question too quick."[71]
During the 1976 United States presidential election, Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter apologized to Lady Bird over comments he made about her husband during an interview in which he stated he would not follow trends of "lying, cheating, and distorting the truth" set forth by former Presidents Nixon and Johnson.[72]
On March 12, 1980, Lady Bird returned to the White House and attended a reception commemorating the fifteenth anniversary of the Head Start program. In his remarks, President Carter expressed gratitude for her attending as he stated "she personifies too, as you know, the essence of what this great man did with those who worked around him", referring to her late husband.[73]
In June 1981, officials of Dartmouth College stated that Johnson and former President Gerald Ford would serve as co-chairs of the fundraising committee for the Rockefeller Center for the Social Sciences.[74] Johnson later attended the dedication of the center in September 1983.[75]
In 1982, Lady Bird and actress Helen Hayes founded the National Wildflower Research Center west of Austin, Texas, as a nonprofit organization devoted to preserving and reintroducing native plants in planned landscapes.[76] In 1994, the center opened a new facility southwest of Austin; they officially renamed it the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in 1995[77] in acknowledgment of her having raised $10 million for the facility.[39] In 2006, the center was incorporated into the University of Texas at Austin.[77]
In 1988, Lady Bird convened with three other former first ladies—Betty Ford, Rosalynn Carter, and Pat Nixon—at the "Women and the Constitution" conference at The Carter Center to assess that document's impact on women. The conference featured over 150 speakers and 1,500 attendees from all 50 states and 10 foreign countries. The conference was meant to promote awareness on sexual inequality in other countries, and fight against it in America.[78]
In September 1991, Johnson unveiled a new line of English porcelain flower sculpture that drew influence from American wildflowers in the Corrigan's Jewelry at NorthPark Center in Dallas.[79]
For 20 years, Lady Bird spent her summers on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard, renting the home of Charles Guggenheim for many of those years. She said she had greatly appreciated the island's natural beauty and flowers.[80]
In August 1984, Lady Bird publicly stated her support for the vice-presidential nomination of Geraldine Ferraro in that year's presidential election while admitting the difficulty the Mondale-Ferraro ticket faced in winning Texas.[81]
Lady Bird returned to the White House for the twenty-fifth-anniversary celebration of her husband's inauguration on April 6, 1990. Incumbent President George H. W. Bush praised Lady Bird for her support of her husband and work toward beautifying landscapes.[82]
On October 13, 2006, Lady Bird made a rare public appearance at the renovation announcement of the LBJ Library and Museum.
Health problems and death
In 1986, 13 years after her husband's death, Lady Bird's health began to fail. She suffered her first fainting spell that year while attending a funeral, and entered St. David's Community Hospital for observation. She also injured her left knee in a fall the day before her hospitalization.[83] In August 1993, she suffered a stroke and became legally blind due to macular degeneration. In 1999, she was hospitalized for a second fainting spell. In 2002, she suffered a second, more severe, stroke, which left her unable to speak normally or walk without assistance. In 2005, she spent a few days in an Austin hospital for treatment of bronchitis. In February 2006, Lynda Johnson Robb told a gathering at the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, that her mother was totally blind and was "not in very good health."[84] In June 2007, she spent six days in Seton Hospital in Austin after suffering from a low-grade fever.[85]
Lady Bird Johnson died at home on July 11, 2007, at 4:18 PM (CDT) from natural causes at the age of 94, attended by family members and Catholic priest Father Robert Scott.[86][87][88]
At the funeral service, her daughter Luci Baines Johnson gave a eulogy, saying, "A few weeks before Mother died, I was taking visiting relatives to the extraordinary Blanton Art Museum ... Mother was on IV antibiotics, a feeding tube, and oxygen, but she wasn't gonna let little things like that deter her from discovering another great art museum. What a picture we were - literally rolling through the museum like a mobile hospital."[89]
Three weeks before Lady Bird's death, the rector of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church in Fredericksburg, which had been her second home for more than 50 years, had announced to his parishioners that she had given $300,000 to pay off the church's mortgage.[90]
Lady Bird's funeral was a public event. On July 15, 2007, a ceremonial cortège left the Texas State Capitol. The public was invited to line the route through downtown Austin on Congress Avenue and along the shores of Lady Bird Lake to pay their respects. The public part of the funeral procession ended in Johnson City. The family had a private burial at the Johnson family cemetery in Stonewall, where she was buried next to her husband, who had died 34 years earlier.[91] Unlike previous funerals for first ladies, the pallbearers came from members of the armed forces.[91][92]
She was the first former First Lady to die in the 21st century. She is also the third-longest-living First Lady, after Bess Truman, who lived to be 97, and Nancy Reagan, who surpassed her by 40 days.
Honors
On August 27, 1969, President Richard Nixon dedicated a 300-acre grove of redwood trees as the "Lady Bird Johnson Grove," due to her efforts as First Lady toward preserving national resources for Americans. The grove is located just north of Orick, California, and is part of Redwood National Park. Lady Bird attended the dedication with former President Johnson.[93]
Lady Bird Johnson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Gerald Ford on January 10, 1977. The citation for her medal read:
One of America's great First Ladies, she claimed her own place in the hearts and history of the American people. In councils of power or in homes of the poor, she made government human with her unique compassion and her grace, warmth and wisdom. Her leadership transformed the American landscape and preserved its natural beauty as a national treasure.[17]
She received the Congressional Gold Medal in 1988, becoming the first wife of a President to receive the honor.[1] In a 1982 poll taken of historians ranking the most influential and important First Ladies, Lady Bird was ranked third—behind Abigail Adams and Eleanor Roosevelt—primarily for her work as a conservation activist.[4]
In 1995, the National Wildflower Research Center—near Austin, Texas—was renamed the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center. She and actress Helen Hayes had founded the center in 1982.
In 1995, Lady Bird received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[94]
In November 1968, Columbia Island, in Washington, D.C., was renamed Lady Bird Johnson Park, in honor of her campaign as First Lady to beautify the capital. In 1976, the Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Grove on the Potomac was dedicated on Columbia Island.[4]
Lady Bird declined many overtures to name Austin's Town Lake in her honor after she had led a campaign to clean up the lake and add trails to its shoreline; following her death, Austin Mayor Will Wynn's office said it was a "foregone conclusion that Town Lake is going to be renamed" in honor of Lady Bird Johnson.[17] The lake was renamed Lady Bird Lake on July 26, 2007.[95]
In April 2008, the "Lady Bird Johnson Memorial Cherry Blossom Grove" was dedicated in Marshfield, Missouri. The dedication took place during the city's annual cherry blossom festival. Johnson had been supportive of the rural community and their initiative to plant ornamental cherry trees.[citation needed]
In 1995, she received an Honor Award from the National Building Museum for her lifetime leadership in beautification and conservation campaigns.[96] She was also named the honorary chairwoman of the Head Start program.[17]
Lady Bird held honorary degrees from many universities: Boston University; the University of Alabama; George Washington University; Johns Hopkins University; State University of New York; Southern Methodist University; Texas Woman's University; Middlebury College; Williams College, Southwestern University; Texas State University–San Marcos; Washington College; and St. Edward's University.[17]
On June 7, 2008, Texas honored Lady Bird by renaming the state convention's Blue Star Breakfast as the 'Lady Bird Breakfast'.[97] In January 2009, St. Edward's University in Austin completed a new residence hall for upperclassmen bearing the name of Lady Bird Johnson Hall, or "LBJ Hall" for short.[98]
On August 28, 2008, Lady Bird Johnson High School was opened in her name in San Antonio, Texas, a part of the North East Independent School District.
On October 22, 2012, the United States Postal Service announced the issue of a souvenir Forever stamp sheet honoring Lady Bird Johnson as a tribute to her legacy of beautifying the nation's roadsides, urban parks and trails. Five of the six stamps feature adaptations of stamps originally issued in the 1960s to promote planting in public spaces. The sixth stamp features her official White House portrait, a painting of the First Lady in a yellow gown, by Elizabeth Shoumatoff. The stamps were dedicated on November 30, 2012, at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center of The University of Texas at Austin.[99]
In 2013, Lady Bird was posthumously awarded the prestigious Rachel Carson Award. The award, presented by Audubon's Women In Conservation, was accepted by her daughter Lynda.[100]
References
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- ^ a b c d e Simnacher, Joe (July 12, 2007). "Lady Bird Johnson dies at 94". The Dallas Morning News. Archived from the original on July 13, 2007. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ a b c "Vibrant spirit takes Lady Bird from a small town to UT". The Palm Beach Post.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Holley, Joe (July 12, 2007). "Champion of Conservation, Loyal Force Behind LBJ". The Washington Post. p. A1. Retrieved July 21, 2007.
- ^ a b c Lady Bird Johnson: The Early Years. PBS.
- ^ "Obituary: Lady Bird Johnson". BBC Online. July 12, 2007. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ "The White House: The First Lady Bird". Time. August 28, 1964. Archived from the original on January 24, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ a b "The White House: The First Lady Bird". Time. August 28, 1964. Archived from the original on January 25, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/taylor-thomas-jefferson-ii
- ^ a b "The White House: The First Lady Bird". Time. August 28, 1964. Archived from the original on January 24, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ The Time magazine article mistakenly uses "Bio" instead of "Bayou" in this title
- ^ 1930 United States Federal Census
- ^ Mark Odintz: Taylor, Thomas Jefferson II from the Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved December 24, 2008.
- ^ "So Glad, So Glad". Time. April 3, 1964.
- ^ a b c B., Henry (September 10, 1967). "A Talk With the First Lady". The New York Times.
- ^ Wilson, Janet. "East Texas wildflower," Austin American-Statesman. July 13, 2007. p.2 (Lady Bird Johnson Commemorative Section)
- ^ a b c d e Wilson, Janet (July 12, 2007). "Lady Bird Johnson dies at 94". Austin American-Statesman. Archived from the original on February 19, 2012. Retrieved July 22, 2007.
- ^ Russell, Jan Jarboe, Lady Bird, A Biography of Mrs. Johnson, 1999, New York: Scribner, pp. 69-70
- ^ DUBOSE, MURPHY (June 15, 2010). "ST. MARY'S COLLEGE". www.tshaonline.org.
- ^ Russell (1999), pp. 70-71
- ^ Russell (1999), pp. 71-72
- ^ University of Texas, Austin, Yearbook 1933
- ^ Russell (1999), p. 83
- ^ Russell (1999), p. 88
- ^ Dallek, Robert (2005). Lyndon B. Johnson: Portrait of a President. Oxford University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0195159219.
- ^ Duke, Armando (July 12, 2007). "Lady Bird Johnson, the First Lady a Nation Mourns". Axcess News. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ Brennan, Patricia (December 11, 2001). "Lady Bird Johnson Was LBJ's Anchor In Troubled Times". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved September 11, 2013.
- ^ Woods, Randall Bennett (2007). LBJ: Architect of American Ambition. Harvard University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0674026995.
- ^ New York Times "Lady Bird Johnson, 94, Dies; Eased a Path to Power" July 12, 2007
- ^ Wilson, Janet. "Wife, mother, partner," The Austin American-Statesman, July 13, 2007, p.3 (Lady Bird Johnson Commemorative Section)
- ^ a b Feldman, Claudia (July 11, 2007). "Green first lady planted a movement; Former first lady Lady Bird Johnson dies at 94". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved March 16, 2014.
- ^ a b NPR "Former First Lady 'Lady Bird' Johnson Dead at 94" July 12, 2007
- ^ Mawajdeh, Hady Karl (November 30, 2015). "How Lady Bird Shaped LBJ's Presidency". KERA News.
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- ^ Frum, David (2000). How We Got Here: The '70s. New York, New York: Basic Books. p. 27. ISBN 0-465-04195-7.
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- ^ O'Donnell, Lawrence (2017). Playing with Fire – The 1968 Elections and the Transformation of American Politics (1st ed.). Penguin Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-3995-6314-0.
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- ^ a b Gillette, Michael L. (December 6, 2012). Lady Bird Johnson: An Oral History. Oxford University Press. p. 334. ISBN 978-0199908080.
- ^ ""... to leave this splendor for our grandchildren": Lady Bird Johnson, Environmentalist Extraordinaire". Organization of American Historians. Archived from the original on November 27, 2010.
- ^ Hendricks, Nancy (2015). America's First Ladies: A Historical Encyclopedia and Primary Document Collection of the Remarkable Women of the White House. ABC-CLIO. pp. 305–306.
- ^ a b "Lady Bird Johnson: The Assassination of President Kennedy". PBS.
- ^ Onion, Rebecca (November 18, 2013). ""It All Began So Beautifully": Lady Bird's Emotional Memories of November 22, 1963". Slate.com.
- ^ Dallek, Robert (1999). Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961-1973. Oxford University Press. pp. 46–47. ISBN 978-0195132380.
- ^ Woods, Randall Bennett (2007). LBJ: Architect of American Ambition. Harvard University Press. p. 442. ISBN 978-0674026995.
- ^ "Showcase for the Nation: The Story of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson's Beautification Program". Texas Archive of the Moving Image. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
- ^ Caroli, Betty Boyd (October 9, 2015). "We should pay more attention to the candidates' spouses. They have more power than we realize". The Washington Post.
- ^ "Whistlestop Campaign". Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, Texas. Archived from the original on November 27, 2011. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
- ^ Young, Robert (January 21, 1965). "Wife Holds Bible as President Takes Oath". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ "Lady Bird Dedicates Peoria's Courthouse". Chicago Tribune. September 23, 1965.
- ^ Hutchinson, Louise (September 23, 1966). "Lady Bird Attends Dam Rights". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ "Expo 67 'Great': Mrs. Johnson". Chicago Tribune. August 21, 1967.
- ^ Hutchinson, Louise (September 18, 1967). "Lady Bird Set for Midwest Tour". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ Hutchinson, Louise (September 20, 1967). "Mrs. Johnson Tours, Urges Life on Farm". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ Buck, Stephanie (March 13, 2017). "The black actress who made Lady Bird Johnson cry: The truth hurts". timeline.com. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
- ^ Amorosi, A. D. (February 27, 1997). "Eartha Kitt". Philadelphia City Paper. Archived from the original on January 6, 2009.
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- ^ Hoerburger, Rob (December 25, 2008). "Eartha Kitt, a Seducer of Audiences, Dies at 81". The New York Times.
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- ^ Inman, William H. (August 17, 1986). "Claudia Taylor 'Lady Bird' Johnson 'A front row seat to history'". UPI.
- ^ "Lady Bird Johnson: Winding Down". pbs.org.
- ^ Smith, Wendy (December 23, 2015). "Claire Underwood Could Learn a Lot From Lady Bird Johnson". The Daily Beast.
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- ^ "Lady Bird Johnson Gets Carter Apology For Comment On Husband". Toledo Blade. September 23, 1976.
- ^ 15th Anniversary of Project Head Start Remarks at a White House Reception. (March 12, 1980)
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- ^ "Dartmouth Remembers Nelson Rockefeller ('30)". New York Times. September 25, 1983.
- ^ "About Us - Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center". Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ a b "The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center at a Glance" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 14, 2012. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
- ^ Carter, Jimmy (2008). Beyond the White House: Waging Peace, Fighting Disease, Building Hope. Simon & Schuster. p. 233. ISBN 978-1416558811.
- ^ "Lady Bird Johnson accepts gift for Wildflower Center". UPI. September 29, 1991.
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- ^ "Lady Bird Johnson 'Proud'". New York Times. August 3, 1984.
- ^ "Remarks at the 25th Anniversary Celebration of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Inauguration". George H. W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum. April 6, 1990.
And I think those who know Lyndon better than I would say that she was his anchor and his strength. And she never failed him. And she was always there. And as she has once again today, Lady Bird brought to the White House dignity and warmth and grace. And she was never on stage, never acting out some part, always the same genuine lady no matter what the setting. Her gift of language is a combination of both elegance and simplicity, a vivid imagery that charms our country to this very day. Mrs. Johnson, you, too, have left this nation a very important legacy. Barbara reminds me of that every single day. And those who travel by car along the banks of the Potomac, or who walk or bicycle along its paths, are each day struck by the wonder of your gift.
- ^ "Lady Bird Johnson, Suffering From Fatigue, Is in Hospital". New York Times. February 8, 1986.
- ^ "Recalling life in the mansion"
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- ^ Episcopal Life Online - Diocesan Digest Archived June 12, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
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- ^ Waychoff, Staff Sgt. Madelyn (July 19, 2007). "Ceremonial Guardsmen lay Lady Bird Johnson to rest". The Bolling Aviator. U.S. Air Force Honor Guard Public Affairs. Archived from the original on January 21, 2013.
This is the second funeral this year in which the Honor Guard has buried a member of a Presidential family.
- ^ Young, Robert (August 28, 2017). "Nixon Names Grove in Lady Bird's Honor". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
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- ^ Brozan, Nadine (June 10, 1995). "Chronicle". The New York Times.
- ^ Moritz, John; Root, Jay (June 6, 2008). "Texas Dems ready to put differences aside" (– Scholar search). Star-Telegram.
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- ^ "Residence Hall Construction Moves Ahead". St. Edward's University. May 21, 2008. Archived from the original on May 31, 2008. Retrieved December 26, 2015.
- ^ Bolen, Robert (October 22, 2012). "Environmentalist Lady Bird Johnson to be Featured on Forever Stamp". USPS.com.
- ^ Weinreich, Regina (August 1, 2013). "Lady Bird Johnson, Rachel Carson and Women Conservationists Honored at the National Audubon Society Luncheon". HuffPost. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
Further reading
- Gillette, Michael L. Lady Bird Johnson: An Oral History (Oxford University Press; 2012) 400pp
- Gould, Lewis L. "First Lady as Catalyst: Lady Bird Johnson and Highway Beautification in the 1960s." Environmental Review: ER 10.2 (1986): 77–92. online
- Hummer, Jill Abraham. "First Ladies and the Cultural Everywoman Ideal: Gender Performance and Representation." White House Studies 9.4 (2009) pp. 403–422. Compares Lady Bird Johnson, Betty Ford, and Barbara Bush.
- Koman, Rita G. "'...to leave this splendor for our grandchildren;: Lady Bird Johnson, Environmentalist Extraordinaire." OAH Magazine of History 15.3 (2001): 30–34.
- Mezzack, Janet. "'Without Manners You Are Nothing': Lady Bird Johnson, Eartha Kitt, and The Women Doers' Luncheon of January 18, 1968." Presidential Studies Quarterly 20.4 (1990): 745–760. online
- Russell, Jan Jarboe. Lady Bird: A Biography of Mrs. Johnson (Simon and Schuster, 2014).
External links
- Lady Bird Johnson, Former First Lady, Dies at 94
- Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library Tribute Site
- Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center
- FBI files on Lady Bird Johnson
- Redwood National Park — Lady Bird Johnson Grove
- Oral History Interviews with Lady Bird Johnson, from the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library
- "Claudia Alta "Lady Bird" Taylor Johnson". Presidential First Lady. Find a Grave. August 9, 2003. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
- Norwood, Arlisha. "Claudia 'Lady Bird' Johnson". National Women's History Museum. 2017.
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