The 13 Most Influential First Ladies
I’m fascinated by our First Ladies. It’s such a public position, and yet it’s so undefined. Each woman who has held it has made it her own, finding individual ways to balance the support of her husband and family with her duties as a representative of the United States. Because the job has no formal parameters, she can be as involved (Eleanor Roosevelt), or as remote (Bess Truman), as she wishes to be.
The Research Institute at Sienna College in upstate New York regularly reviews the First Ladies and, with the help of 90 history and poli sci professors from across the United States, ranks them based on their integrity, intelligence, courage, value to country, value to the President, leadership, public image, and “being her own woman.”
Here’s the latest ranking:
1. Eleanor Roosevelt
2. Abigail Adams
3. Dolly Madison
4. Jacqueline Kennedy
5. Hillary Clinton
6. Rosalyn Carter
7. Lady Bird Johnson
8. Betty Ford
9. Edith Roosevelt
10. Sarah Polk
11. Edith Wilson
12. Louisa Adams
13. Martha Washington
Two First Ladies who bounce around in the ratings from decade to decade – Hillary and Jackie – met and liked each other. Interestingly, Jackie’s stock has risen since her death, while Hillary’s dropped after she left the White House for the Senate. Of course, these rankings were established before Hillary’s historic run for President. She may rank higher again these days. (And I wonder what the folks at Sienna would have done with Bill had she had been elected.)
I admire Jackie enormously because she represents what I wish I was, but ain’t: Cool and self-contained, feminine yet strong. That she was only 31 when she became First Lady simply amazes me. How did she come up with that much poise, that much style, and that much sheer intestinal fortitude at such a young age? Internationally, she represented us with grace. Domestically, her goal was to make us proud of our young heritage with projects like state dinners at Mount Vernon and restoring the White House. She could also be very shrewd. To finance the restoration, she initiated the sale of White House souvenir books. Her husband’s advisers warned her that the public would reject this as crass. They were wrong. Decades after the Kennedy-era restoration was paid for, profits from the souvenir books were still saving taxpayers money by defraying the cost of White House maintenance.
I have been learning about Abigail Adams from both the extraordinary HBO miniseries and a book by Phyllis Lee Levine. Wife of one President, mother to another, she was an influence on Jefferson, as well. Forward thinking, literate, patriotic and loving, she is a revelation and inspiration to me. (Since both Mrs. Adamses made the list, I wondered how that other Presidential mother-in-law/daughter-in-law duo rates. Laura Bush is #24 and Barbara Bush came in at #15.)
But two First Ladies that I also feel fondness for because of the extraordinarily tough rows they had to hoe are ranked close to the bottom: Pat Nixon at 33 and Mary Lincoln at 36. Pat Nixon was the epitome of grace under ongoing and unimaginable pressure, even though she was completely blameless in Watergate. Mary Lincoln had in-laws who fought for the Confederacy and, like Jackie, had to bury both a son and a husband before she left the White House. My heart aches for these two, and I think those historians and professors should give them a break.
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SORRY, EVERYONE! SLAMMED TODAY AT WORK AND MAY NOT BE ABLE TO GET TO YOUR TT'S TODAY!
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I'm not at all surprised by #1. Perhaps the only First Lady to enter the history books in a big way.
ReplyDeleteThat's a very good list. A fascinating TT.
ReplyDeleteSJR
The Pink Flamingo
http://thepinkflamingo.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2008/7/30/3814345.html
Eleanor's position at #1 didn't surprise me either. If it was up to you to rank the first ladies, how would this Thursday Thirteen differ?
ReplyDeleteGreat list of women.
ReplyDeleteI love your TT header!! This is a very interesting list. Jackie has always fascinated me.
ReplyDeleteMy TT has 13 posts without comments.
I think my favorite in MY time is Lady Bird Johnson.
ReplyDeleteMy 13 is posted...drop by and have a laugh or two! Won't you?
Great list. Each first lady has definitely brought something unique to the job.
ReplyDeleteWe tend to know about the ones who were first ladies during our lifetimes. Eleanor Roosevelt was hands down the most popular among the masses and I am not at all surprised by her ranking. What does surprise me is the ranking of Abigail Adams. I will have to read up on her to find out why she is so popular.
ReplyDeleteGreat choice for TT! mine' s up too hope you can drop by... Happy TT!
ReplyDeletewow - what a great list (of course). I don't know much about the Presidents or first ladies. I just know that I would hate hate hate the job.
ReplyDeleteHappy TT!
Very interesting list!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting TT - I'm going to send this link on to my mom - she's the history buff in our family.
ReplyDeleteI am very happy to Eleanor Roosevelt at the top of the list. She's a First Lady that I admire very much.
Great list and I learned something...hopefully my First Lady of choice will make the Top 10 list one day. :)
ReplyDeleteI have to give Hillary a lot of credit. This is a great list. I am surprised Martha is at the bottom.
ReplyDeleteBelieve in the beauty of your dreams ~Eleanor Roosevelt.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favorite quotes.
Great list. Happy T13!
I too adore Abigail Adams.
ReplyDeleteGreat great list.
Interesting list of ladies I must say. I find Eleanor the most inspirational.
ReplyDeleteMy 34th TT is up: 13 comments you can make to your physician while he's performing a colonoscopy on you. Here's the link.
Fantastic list! Informative. Kim
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting list! Thanks for sharing the links, I can use this when I go back to school.
ReplyDelete:-)
A Very interesting list. I never learned much about first ladies, but as many people, I adore Jackie.
ReplyDeleteHappy TT. Closing in on the end of the alphabet - V is today's letter!
You have a most interesting topic today … and even more intriguing list. I’d put Eleanor Roosevelt at the top myself … and would definitely include Jackie, Hillary, Rosalyn for modern times. I’d need to think about who else I might opt to include and why. Sorry you’re slammed at work today but it’s good you decided to cut yourself some slack … just because.
ReplyDeleteHugs and blessings,