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Jeannie Baliles

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Jeannie Baliles
First Lady of Virginia
In role
January 18, 1986 – January 13, 1990
GovernorGerald L. Baliles
Preceded byLynda Bird Johnson Robb
Succeeded byOffice Vacant (1990–1994)
Personal details
Born
Jeannie McPherson Patterson

North Carolina, U.S.
Spouse
(m. 1965; div. 1996)
ChildrenLaura Baliles
Jonathan Baliles
Alma materWashington College
Wesleyan University

Jeannie P. Baliles (born Jeannie McPherson Patterson) founded the Virginia Literacy Foundation, which was incorporated in 1987. She is the former wife of Gerald L. Baliles, the 65th Governor of Virginia, and served as First Lady of Virginia from 1986 to 1990.

Personal life

Jeannie McPherson Patterson Baliles was born in North Carolina and raised near Baltimore. She took her undergraduate and graduate degrees in history from Washington College (1962), and taught history until the birth of her first child. Ms. Baliles went on to earn a M.A.T. in history from Wesleyan University. She was inducted into the Delta Kappa Gamma honor society (education). Baliles is the founder and chairman of the Virginia Literary Foundation and served as the Chairman of the Virginia Opera. She has served as a trustee on the Virginia Environmental Endowment, the Community Foundation of Central Virginia, and the Jenkins Foundation. She has also served on the board of Wolf Trap, the Nature Conservancy, the Jamestown-Yorktown Trust, YMCA, the Historic Richmond Foundation, and on the Board of Trustees of Virginia Union University[1] and the Richmond Ballet.[2] In 2008, Richmond Mayor L. Douglas Wilder appointed her to a charter-study commission to review the City Charter.[3] Ms. Baliles, who was divorced from Governor Baliles in 1996,[4] has two children from the marriage, Laura and Jonathan.

Founder of the Virginia Literacy Foundation

When Jeannie Baliles became First Lady of Virginia in 1986, she immediately named fighting adult illiteracy as a major societal issue that needed to be addressed. In 1987, she oversaw the founding of the Virginia Literacy Foundation (VLF) with founding director Mark Emblidge and has served as its chair ever since.[5] Under her leadership, the VLF donates $200,000 per year in matching grants ($4 million so far) to grass roots literacy organizations that taught literacy skills to adults who read at or below basic literacy levels. Ms. Baliles was also instrumental in creating a public-private partnership that would oversee and prevent overlapping services among all community-based literacy organizations throughout the state. During her tenure as the nation's First Lady, Barbara Bush had publicized the plight of the millions of adults in America with low literacy skills, and had influenced the formation of many new grass roots adult literacy programs in the nation, and influential people like Jeannie Baliles. On page 330 of her 1995 Memoir, Mrs. Bush wrote about Ms. Baliles, "She is a ball of fire and has done a real job in her state and has shown real leadership in the field." [6] The Foundation also partnered with the State Department of Education in the Virginia Literacy Initiative to encourage the spread of family and workplace literacy programs in the commonwealth. During the 1980s, this model was unprecedented in the nation. Each year the Jeannie P. Baliles Awards recognized the outstanding contributions of students, volunteers and program staff of Virginia's literacy organizations. In 1989, the Virginia Press Women voted Jeannie P. Baliles the Newsmaker of the Year as first lady of Virginia and leader in literacy programs.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-05-06. Retrieved 2010-01-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Baliles, Jeannie. "Richmond Ballet". Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
  3. ^ "Wilder Announces Charter Study Appointees". Richmond Times Dispatch. Archived from the original on 4 February 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2011.
  4. ^ "Richmond Magazine". Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  5. ^ "Virginia Literacy Foundation". Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  6. ^ Bush, Barbara (15 November 1995). Barbara Bush: A Memoir. Macmillan. ISBN 9780312956646. Retrieved 20 February 2018 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ http://www.virginialiteracy.org/about/jeannie.html Archived 2008-09-07 at the Wayback Machine Virginia Literacy Foundation: Biography