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first lady

 
Dictionary: first lady
 

n.
  1. often First Lady The wife or hostess of the chief executive of a country, state, or city.
  2. The foremost woman of a specified profession or art: the first lady of the American theater.

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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.

For more information on first lady, visit Britannica.com.

 
US Government Guide: First Lady
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Initially, the President's wife was referred to as Lady (as in “Lady Washington”) or Mrs. President. The term First Lady was coined by Mary Clemmer Ames in an 1877 magazine article describing the inauguration of President Rutherford B. Hayes. It was popularized by a play about Dolley Madison entitled The First Lady in the Land, produced in New York City in 1911.

All Presidents except for James Buchanan married. Five remarried after the death of their first wife, and one (Ronald Reagan) remarried after a divorce. Some wives died before their husband reached the White House, including Martha Jefferson, Rachel Jackson, Hannah Van Buren, and Ellen Arthur. Presidents who were unmarried while in office relied on hostesses to assist them at state dinners, receptions, and other social functions. These include Martha Jefferson Randolph, daughter of Thomas Jefferson; Emily Donelson, niece of Andrew Jackson; Angelica Van Buren, daughter-in-law of Martin Van Buren; Harriet Lane, niece of James Buchanan; Martha Patterson, daughter of Andrew Johnson; and Mary Arthur McElroy, sister of Chester Arthur.

In the 19th century few First Ladies had much formal education and none had careers, with the exception of Abigail Fillmore, a teacher. Most occupied themselves by managing the White House, hosting its social functions, and raising their family. The first to attend school was Anna Harrison, wife of William Henry Harrison; the first to attend college was Lucretia Garfield, who graduated from Hiram College. “Lemonade” Lucy Hayes did charity work and promoted the temperance (antialcohol) movement; Caroline Harrison, wife of Benjamin Harrison, raised money for Johns Hopkins University and pressed it to accept women into the medical school.

The wedding of Grover Cleveland and Frances Folsom, which took place in the White House on June 2, 1886, marked the first time a President was married in the executive mansion. Press coverage of that event made the First Lady a nationally known figure. Edith Roosevelt (wife of Theodore) was the first to hire a social secretary to assist her in her duties. Woodrow Wilson's first wife, Ellen, was the first to take a public position on a bill being considered by Congress; his second wife, Edith, served as a liaison between her husband and the rest of government after he suffered a stroke in 1919.

Eleanor Roosevelt was the first Presidential wife to have a significant career; she was a teacher, journalist, and Democratic party activist. Others with careers include Jacqueline Kennedy (journalism and publishing), Patricia Nixon (teaching and government service), Lady Bird Johnson (communications), Nancy Reagan (acting), and Hillary Clinton (law), though none pursued their careers in the White House as Mrs. Roosevelt had done.

Lady Bird Johnson was the first wife to campaign alone on behalf of her husband in a Presidential campaign. Rosalynn Carter was the first to play an active role within the White House Office, acting as a staff aide to the President. She testified before Congress on legislation, supported the Equal Rights Amendment, was active in promoting mental health initiatives in government, met foreign heads of state as her husband's representative, and attended cabinet meetings. Nancy Reagan sponsored a “Just Say No” campaign against drug use. Barbara Bush, who dropped out of Smith College in her sophomore year to marry George Bush and raise a family, was active in organizing a campaign against illiteracy.

Hillary Clinton, a graduate of Yale Law School, was a partner in a large corporate law firm in Little Rock while her husband, Bill Clinton, served as governor of Arkansas. She also chaired the board of the Children's Defense Fund. During the transition to the Clinton administration, she used her influence to bring large numbers of women into high levels of government. She was given an office in the West Wing and was put in charge of a task force on health care reform, but after a bill embodying her plan failed to pass Congress, she backed away from a visible role in policy-making. She preferred instead to assume a more traditional role in public while retaining her place as one of the President's most important advisers. She did, however, become the first First Lady in American history to hold an elective office, when she won the New York Democratic seat in the U.S. Senate.

Traditionally, First Ladies took responsibility for furnishing the family quarters, assisted by the White House Curator, who is responsible for the maintenance and restoration of its public rooms with authentic period furniture; for hosting White House social functions, including choosing the menu and entertainment; and for representing the President on ceremonial occasions. Today they also serve as confidential advisers and policy formulators.

The First Lady earns no salary and holds no formal office. She employs more than 20 aides and has an office in the East Wing of the White House to answer mail, deal with the media, and supervise social functions. She uses her West Wing office to work on policies of interest to her.

See also Adams, Abigail; Kennedy, Jacqueline; Madison, Dolley; Roosevelt, Eleanor; White House

Sources

  • Paul F. Boller, Jr., Presidential Wives (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988).
  • Betty Boyd Caroli, First Ladies, expanded ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995).
  • Lewis J. Gould, ed., American First Ladies: Their Lives and Their Legacy (New York: Garland, 1996).
  • Lewis L. Gould, “First Ladies”, American Scholar (Autumn 1986): 528–35.
  • Lewis L. Gould, “Modern First Ladies and the Presidency”, Presidential Studies Quarterly 20 (Fall 1990): 677–82
 
US History Encyclopedia: First Ladies
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The wife of the President of the United States is commonly called the First Lady. The term, like the position, is undefined, improvised, and extra-Constitutional. Nevertheless, the role of First Lady of the United States has evolved and developed certain boundaries over the years. Today, each First Lady is one of the most famous and most scrutinized women in America, for better and worse. The position offers the president's spouse a platform to address important issues. Yet, placing a modern woman in an anachronistic, derivative, and amorphous position, playing to a public with mixed emotions about the role of women, the nature of family, and the centrality of government, has made this unpaid task "the second toughest job in America."

Origins of the Term

The first "First Lady," Martha Washington, was often known as "Lady Washington." Then, as now, Americans were ambivalent. Proximity to the Revolutionary experience, and pride in their frontier independence, made Americans wary of bestowing monarchical touches on the presidency, or creating a family-based court around the chief executive. Yet a weakness for pomp and a yearning for majesty persisted. Abigail Adams was sometimes called "Mrs. President" or even "Her Majesty." Other early first ladies were addressed as "Presidentress."

The origins of the term "First Lady" are murky. In 1849, President Zachary Taylor eulogized Dolley Madison, saying, "She will never be forgotten, because she was truly our First Lady for a half-century." The British war correspondent William Howard Russell noted in his published Civil War diary in 1863 the gossip about "the first Lady in the Land." This is the first recorded reference to an incumbent First Lady, in this case Mary Todd Lincoln. A reporter and novelist, Mary Clemmer Ames, applied the same phrase to Lucy Webb Hayes in 1877, and the term was bandied about when the bachelor President Grover Cleveland married young Frances Folsom in the White House in 1886. The term became popular after Charles Nirdlinger's 1911 play about Dolley Madison, "The First Lady in the Land." Still, not all modern First Ladies have appreciated the title. Jackie Kennedy preferred the more democratic designation, "Mrs. Kennedy," grumbling that "First Lady" was more suited to "a saddle horse."

A State Prisoner? the First "first Ladies"

As all her successors would, Martha Washington balanced the informal and the formal, her private needs with public demands. George Washington decided that he and Martha would host a weekly drawing room on Friday evenings, and dinner parties on Thursday evenings. They would accept no private invitations. Mrs. Washington was miserable. "I am more like a state prisoner than anything else," she wrote, "there is certain bounds set for me which I must not depart from—and as I can not doe as I like I am obstinate and stay at home a great deal."

Many of Martha Washington's successors would resent the "bounds set" for them—by their husbands or the public. Traditional proprieties circumscribed First Ladies' behavior, well into the modern era. The ideology of domesticity constrained all wives, especially the President's wife. The one consistent duty was that of the President's hostess. Not all White House hostesses, however, were First Ladies. The widowed Thomas Jefferson relied on Dolley Madison. James Buchanan, a bachelor, relied on his niece Harriet Lane, while the widowed Andrew Jackson relied on two nieces. During John Tyler's one term four women hosted: his ailing wife Letitia, his daughter-in-law Priscilla, his daughter Letitia Semple, and after Letitia Tyler's death, his second wife Julia Gardiner Tyler.

First Ladies of the New Republic: Washington Society's Grand Dames

Still, throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, First Ladies had considerable latitude in defining their broader roles and most enjoyed a low public profile. With the president himself removed from most Americans' daily lives, the First Lady rarely made the newspapers. However, in presiding over the White House social life, all First Ladies were the titular heads of Washington society. Some, like Dolley Madison, relished the role. Others hated it. Some, like Julia Tyler, plunged into politics, lobbying at White House social events. Most did not. Some, like Sarah Polk, were effective behind-the-scenes advisers, true political partners. Most were not.

Some nineteenth-century First Ladies did attract public attention. Dolley Madison was the grande dame of Washington, dominating the social scene, and capturing the public's imagination, for almost half a century. The vivacious Lucy Webb Hayes and the young Frances Folsom Cleveland also charmed the public, foreshadowing the modern role of First Lady as celebrity. Mary Todd Lincoln, by contrast, was the black sheep of the Lincoln Administration, distrusted as a Southerner, despised for her extravagances, and demonized for her individuality.

Just as Theodore Roosevelt helped usher the presidency into the twentieth century, his wife, Edith Kermit Roosevelt, helped institutionalize the First Ladyship. In 1902, Mrs. Roosevelt hired the first social secretary to a First Lady. A century later, the Office of the First Lady has a multimillion-dollar budget, and usually at least one dozen employees, including a social secretary, a press secretary, and a chief of staff.

Americans' longstanding republican fears of schemers subverting the presidency made the First Lady's position even more delicate. When Ulysses S. Grant proved to be inscrutable as president in the 1870s, Washington wags decided that his wife, Julia, was manipulating him. In fact, Mrs. Grant had little interest in policy issues. Half a century later, when Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke in late 1919, his second wife, Edith Wilson, did get involved. Mrs. Wilson functioned as a virtual chief of staff—some said as a virtual president—and suppressed information about the President's illness. Historians still debate how incapacitated Woodrow Wilson was, and how much input Mrs. Wilson had. Still, the charges that "Mrs. President" became "the first woman president," and instituted "petticoat government" offered a cautionary tale to activist First Ladies. Those who do seem too interested in power attract opprobrium.

Edith Wilson's three Republican successors reverted to the more traditional role. Although none were as passive as the public believed, they attracted less flak. Florence Harding helped orchestrate her husband's career; Grace Coolidge brought a touch of glamour to her staid husband's administration; and Lou Henry Hoover became the first First Lady to address the nation on the radio.

Modern Challenges: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Successors

The great divide in the history of First Ladies comes with Eleanor Roosevelt's tenure. Eleanor Roosevelt was more political, more engaged, more public, and more influential than her predecessors. Her activism was systematic not sporadic. She wrote an ongoing newspaper column, held frequent press conferences, lobbied Congress directly, and regularly served as Franklin Roosevelt's emissary to liberals, laborers, blacks, Jews, and other oftforgotten men and women. In demonstrating the First Lady's great potential, Mrs. Roosevelt renegotiated the terms of the relationship between the First Lady and the public. All of Mrs. Roosevelt's successors, including the supposedly passive Bess Truman and Mamie Eisenhower, would be operating as modern First Ladies, on the political stage, and in the public eye.

Since Eleanor Roosevelt, all First Ladies have felt compelled to project a public persona; all First Ladies have tended to advance at least one pet cause, from Jackie Kennedy's White House renovation to Lady Bird Johnson's beautification of the capital, from Nancy Reagan's "Just Say No to Drugs" campaign, to Hillary Rodham Clinton's say yes to national health care crusade. The Roosevelt revolution was furthered by the expansion of the presidency and the government, the emergence of a national media, and the feminist rebellion. All these forces combined have shifted the First Ladies' priorities, making her role more public and more political.

Furthermore, in this celebrity age, First Ladies can generate excitement. Jackie Kennedy's charm and grace demonstrated First Ladies' political potential in the television age. Mrs. Kennedy became instrumental in setting the tone of her husband's "New Frontier," and perpetuating his legend.

And yet, the transformation had its limits. While First Ladies have struggled with modern demands, Americans have looked to First Ladies to embody tradition in a changing republic. First Ladies who seem too aggressive, too modern, often generate controversy, as do First Ladies who seem too powerful and too political. When Lady Bird Johnson's beautification campaign shifted from fundraising and uplift to a Highway Beautification Act in 1965, her project no longer seemed so innocuous. Nancy Reagan effectively rehabilitated her own reputation by shifting from seeming too concerned with redecorating the White House, to emphasizing her longstanding commitment to encouraging foster grandparents and discouraging drug use. But, by 1986, during Reagan's second term, as she clashed with presidential advisers, she, too, was attacked for being power-hungry. And after Barbara Bush's smooth term, wherein she avoided most political issues, Hillary Rodham Clinton's more activist stance thrilled some, and infuriated others.

Even today, in the twenty-first century, the First Lady struggles with gossamer shackles. First Ladies have a national podium, as Betty Ford discovered when she discussed her breast cancer in public in 1974. But it remains, as Nancy Reagan said, a "white-glove pulpit," a modern forum, suffused with the celebrity glow, still restrained by an American yearning for tradition, ambivalence about the role of modern women, and fear of someone, anyone, but especially his wife, getting too close to the President of the United States of America.

Bibliography

Black, Allida. Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Shaping of Postwar Liberalism. New York: Columbia University Press, 1996. Helpful in seeing Eleanor Roosevelt in her broadest context.

Caroli, Betty Boyd. First Ladies. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.

Gould, Lewis L., ed. American First Ladies: Their Lives and Their Legacy. New York: Garland Publishing, 1996. Excellent and authoritative.

Troy, Gil. Mr. and Mrs. President: From the Trumans to the Clintons. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2000.

—Gil Troy

 
WordNet: first lady
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 2 meanings:

Meaning #1: the leading woman in an art or profession

Meaning #2: the wife of a chief executive


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
US Government Guide. The Oxford Guide to the United States Government. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1998, 2001, 2002 by John J. Patrick, Richard M. Pious, Donald M. Ritchie. All rights reserved.  Read more
US History Encyclopedia. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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