Thereâs no position description for a first lady. But nowâthanks to the first-ever textbook coauthored by three founding members of the First Ladies Association for Research and Education, an affiliate of AUâs center devoted to the study of the countryâs most exclusive sororityâthere is a scholarly record of their work written exclusively for college students.
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US First Ladies: Making History and Leaving Legacies, released in July, âdraws on Abigail Adamsâs plea to her husband, John, in 1776 to âRemember the ladies,ââ says Anita McBride, WSP â81, former chief of staff to First Lady Laura Bush and director of AUâs First Ladies Initiative.
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âThis book fills a gap in the academic literature,â continues McBride, executive in residence at the Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies in the School of Public Affairs. âThere have been plenty of biographies and memoirs. What was missing was a contextual overview of the first ladiesâ contributions from the founding of the country to today and an examination of how the role has evolved in a way that mirrors the evolution of women in society.â
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Jill Biden penned the forward to the book, which, in the words of the current first lady, âshines a spotlight on women who have so often thrived in the shadows ofÌętheir spouses . . . [serving as] trusted advisors, diplomats, and legends in their own right.â In addition to profiles of Martha Washington and her 40-plus predecessors, the book explores first ladiesâ speeches, campaign appearances, advocacy, and stewardship of the White House.Ìę
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âThese women are in such a unique position,â McBride says. âThey are unelected, but the minute the president takes the oath of office, his spouse has a platform. The question is: How do they choose to use it?âÌę
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One of her favorite case studies from a book chock full of them is that of Bess Truman (pictured), who in 1948 helped her husband oversee the largest-ever renovation of the White House.
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After a structural survey revealed that the nearly 150-year-old structure was on the verge of collapse, Congress pushed to demolish the landmark and build anew. But Truman, âwho history tends to remember as very behind-the-scenes,â McBride says, summoned her quiet power to quite literally save 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
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âI hadnât realized that Mrs. Truman worked as a Senate staffer to her husband, handling his correspondence and writing his speeches,â McBride says. âShe was intimately knowledgeable about how the appropriations process worked, and she utilized her skills almost like a lobbyist to prevail upon senatorsâand their wivesâto preserve the building. Her message was: âThe American people will never forgive you for removing a symbol as important as this if you tear the building down.ââ
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They didnâtâand the four-year, $5.5 million renovation not only saved the White House but cemented in history Bess Trumanâs legacy.
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McBride and her coauthors, Nancy Kegan Smith and Diana Carlin, SPA adjunct professorial lecturer, tested an early draft of the textbook in four different university classesâtwo of them at AU. Based on student feedback, the writing team added tables with important dates and facts, alongside bolded key words, bulleted learning objectives, and discussion questions.
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âI appreciated the genuine interest in my feedback,â says Trevor Jones, SPA/MPA â23, who used the text in his Americaâs First Ladies class last fall. âI enjoyed the thoughtful discussions with my classmates about the book, which offers the reader a much fuller history of the American presidency.âÌę
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The textbook has been so well received, in fact, that the authors are working on a trade version, Remember theÌęFirst Ladies: The Legacies of Americaâs History-Making Women, which hits shelves in December.
McBride says she doesnât know why it took so long for someone to write a scholarly textbook account of Americaâs first ladies, but sheâs honored to be the first to do it.ÌęâWorking for a first lady, I had a front row seat to history; itâs so exciting to give readers a glimpse into that world.â