American History Tellers - First Ladies | No Handbook | 6
Episode Date: July 31, 2024There’s no job description for the role of First Lady of the United States. Betty Ford described it as being “much more than a 24-hour job.” First Ladies move into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave...nue along with the President and have to forge their own path. They are scrutinized for what they wear, what they say, and how they raise their children. Perhaps because of that, it tends to be a tight-knit sorority, regardless of political party. Today, Lindsay is joined by journalist Kate Andersen Brower. She’s the author of many books, including First Women: The Grace and Power of America’s Modern First Ladies, and she wrote the introduction to the American History Teller’s book, The Hidden History of the White House.Order your copy of the new American History Tellers book, The Hidden History of the White House, for behind-the-scenes stories of some of the most dramatic events in American history—set right inside the house where it happened.Listen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Wondery Plus subscribers can binge new seasons of American History Tellers early and ad-free right now.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Imagine it's April 15th, 1945, and you're on a train rolling out of the station in Poughkeepsie,
New York. You're the Secretary of Labor, and this morning, you attended the burial of President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt at his Hyde Park estate. You stare out the window, images of somber faces
and a flag-draped coffin playing through your mind.
Pulling yourself from your thoughts, you turn your attention to the woman sitting across from you,
Bess Truman, the new First Lady of the United States. She fidgets with a handkerchief in her lap. You sigh and lean forward. It was a shock to us all, and I'm sure especially for you and Harry.
She nods, her red-rimmed eyes meeting your gaze.
I'm not cut out for the spotlight.
I never wanted this.
Harry's only been vice president for three months.
I never imagined he would suddenly become president.
I don't know anything about being the first lady.
Of course, it must be overwhelming.
But I hear Eleanor plans to introduce you to the White House reporters
before your first press conference.
That's a good start.
Bess bites her lip, anxiety flooding her face.
I dread the thought.
Eleanor is so comfortable with the press,
so at ease with public life.
I'm nothing like her. Eleanor is
certainly unique. She thrives on her exchanges with reporters. And I'm horrible at public speaking.
My palms sweat. I stumble over my words. It wasn't easy for Eleanor at first, but she got the hang of it in time. You will too.
I don't want to make a fool of myself.
Or even worse, make a fool of Harry.
She shakes her head, tears welling in her eyes.
You reach out and squeeze her hand gently.
There's no rulebook for being First Lady.
Yes, you'll have certain ceremonial duties that can be avoided, but you don't have to follow
Eleanor's footsteps exactly. Did you know that she was the only first lady to hold press conferences?
Is that so? Yes, she was the first. You're not obligated to continue the tradition.
If you're uncomfortable with it, then don't do it. Hope flickers in her eyes.
You really think I can cancel the press conference?
Of course.
There's no one way to be First Lady.
Eleanor found her own way, and you will too.
Bess relaxes into her seat, breathing a sigh of relief.
But as you turn to watch the landscape roll past, you can't help but worry for her.
You don't doubt her commitment to supporting her husband,
but you know that nothing can prepare her for the intense scrutiny she will face as First Lady.
Richard Bandler revolutionized the world of self-help all thanks to an approach he developed called neuro-linguistic programming.
Even though NLP worked for some, its methods have been criticized for being dangerous in the wrong hands.
Throw in Richard's dark past as a cocaine addict and murder victims, and what's left once the facade falls away.
We recently dove into the story of the godfather of modern mental manipulation, Richard Bandler, whose methods inspired some of the most toxic and criminal self-help movements of the last two decades.
Follow Scamfluencers on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Scamfluencers and more Exhibit C true crime shows like Morbid and Kill List
early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Check out Exhibit C in the Wondery app for all your true crime listening.
Dracula, the ancient vampire who terrorizes Victorian London. Blood and garlic,
bats and crucifixes. Even if you haven't read the book, you think you know the story.
One of the incredible things about Dracula is that not only is it this wonderful snapshot of
the 19th century, but it also has so much resonance today. The vampire doesn't cast a
reflection in a mirror. So when we look in
the mirror, the only thing we see is our own monstrous abilities. From the host and producer
of American History Tellers and History Daily comes the new podcast, The Real History of Dracula.
We'll reveal how author Bram Stoker raided ancient folklore, exploited Victorian fears around sex, science, and religion,
and how even today we remain
enthralled to his strange creatures
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Join Wondery+, and The Wondery app,
Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
From Wondery, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is American History Tellers.
Our history, your story. In April 1945, the sudden death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt thrust Harry Truman into the presidency and his wife Bess Truman into the role of First Lady.
Unlike her predecessor, Eleanor Roosevelt, Bess Truman was an extremely private person.
Taking advice from Labor Secretary Francis Perkins,
she ended Eleanor Roosevelt's practice of holding regular press conferences.
As First Lady, Mrs. Truman preferred to support her husband behind the scenes
as a close advisor and sounding board.
To discuss the enormous pressure faced by modern First Ladies,
from Jackie Kennedy to Michelle Obama,
as well as the ways First
Ladies find to support one another, I'm joined today by journalist Kate Anderson-Brauer.
She's the author of several books, including First Women, The Grace and Power of America's
Modern First Ladies.
Here's our conversation.
Kate Anderson-Brauer, welcome back to American History Tellers.
Thanks for having me, Lindsay.
Now, last time we spoke to you, it was about the American History Tellers book.
But today, I'd like to talk to you about your book, First Women.
What was the impetus for writing about first ladies?
Well, I wrote a book called The Residents about the people who work at the White House behind the scenes.
And they all told me that the person who
makes all the decisions in the White House is really the first lady. And so it made me think
about the role of the first lady and how important it is in the actual running of the White House,
and then also how complicated that position has always been. It's very fraught in our history.
And I looked at first ladies from Jackie Kennedy until Michelle Obama and sort of delved into how they dealt with this very undefined role.
They're just trying to live their lives in the White House, raise kids, trying to figure out what to do with their platform.
It's a very challenging job.
And you, of course, were familiar with the White House because you covered the Obama administration for Bloomberg and worked from the White House.
During that time, you and a small group of journalists had lunch with First Lady Michelle Obama.
To give us a sense of how, perhaps under the microscope, a first lady can be, could you tell us about something Michelle Obama said during that lunch?
An offhand comment that just kind of blew up into a much bigger thing?
Well, it's kind of funny because I got a little in trouble for this. My editor was not so happy with me because I overlooked this statement. It was a very formal lunch in the old family
dining room on the state floor of the White House. And she was talking to about a dozen
reporters who cover the East Wing, mostly women. And she was talking about a whole range of issues.
And it was to celebrate the Let's Move campaign anniversary, the campaign she established
as first lady to get children to eat healthier and end childhood obesity.
Because as you know, every first lady comes up with a campaign that's sort of apolitical
or a project that's apolitical.
And she made some offhand
comment about her husband finally stopping smoking. He had quit finally this time. Everyone
knew he, you know, had struggled, was trying to quit on the campaign. And I remember walking back
to my desk in the basement of the White House where all the reporters sit, you know, it's this
tiny little closet area and there are these little cubicles. And I filed the story and my editor called and said, what about the smoking?
You know, and I didn't think that much of it, but the AP story led with the smoking. It became
something that the White House had to put out a press release about to respond to. And so it just
made me see in very stark relief how under the microscope a first lady is.
They can't say anything casually.
Now, you start your book with one of the most famous of all first ladies, Jackie Kennedy, having a meeting with Hillary Clinton in 1993.
Hillary had at that point been first lady for just about seven months.
And Jackie was giving Hillary
Clinton some advice. What was it? You know, it was to focus on Chelsea. She knew what it was
like to raise Caroline and JFK Jr. for the couple years that they were in the White House. And I
think a lot of first ladies felt specifically concerned for Chelsea because she was an only child. And so being under
the microscope alone is very difficult. But there was a time when Hillary, they were on this yacht,
and Hillary got up on the diving board, and she stood there terrified, and everyone was telling
her to jump. And Jackie told her, you know, don't do it. You don't have to jump. And Hillary actually got down. And so I thought this was kind of a metaphor for how Jackie understood what it was like for Hillary to be facing the difficulties and the pressure of being first lady. ladies really understand and can communicate to each other because there's no handbook for
incoming first ladies. There's very little official protocol, no note written and left
like the presidents do for one another. But there is something outgoing first ladies do
do for incoming first ladies. What's that? Well, that's a White House tour, and that's
usually a really important part of the transition. It happens after the election and before the
inauguration, so often in the winter, late fall, early winter, where, you know, Melania Trump came
and sat with Michelle Obama and got a tour of the White House. This happens every transition. So,
you know, Barbara Bush gave Hillary Clinton a tour of the White House. And often it can be
awkward because it's, you know,
if your husband was a one-term president. For instance, for Betty Ford, it was very difficult
to give Rosalind Carter a tour of the White House because she was still so angry and bitter that her
husband was defeated. I interviewed several first ladies and also their chiefs of staff and press secretaries. And they said it's very hard for the first lady to put aside that sense of upset and anger when their husband loses.
But the tour is very important.
There's actually a place on the second floor of the White House in the private residence
where the first lady will take the incoming first lady and show her where
she can peek down and see her husband at work in the Oval Office, which I think also draws to mind
and makes you think about the intense level of isolation that goes on in that house because,
you know, you're in this fishbowl and so much is expected of you. Lady Bird Johnson said that a first lady is a showman and a salesman, a clothes horse and a publicity sounding board.
And they can never please everyone all the time.
So there is this sense of camaraderie around them, which I found really interesting. But I suppose this tour is actually very practical because probably many incoming families have not spent much time in the house they're going to be living in for the next four years.
Give us an idea of where the family lives within the White House and how is it a domestic place?
That reminds me, Lindsay, of one tour that's really great to talk about is the Bush daughters giving the Obama daughters a tour of the third floor. So it is a house. It's where they live on the second and third floors of the
White House. The second floor, you have the kitchen, a family dining room, the West Sitting
Hall, the Yellow Oval Room. They spend a lot of time in the West Sitting Hall. It's kind of a
family room. And then on the third floor is the solarium, which is
another kind of major hangout room that's changed over the years. You know, when the Johnsons were
in office, it was a teenage hangout. When the Obamas were in office, it's where Sasha and Malia
Obama would have sleepovers. And it has this sweeping view of the mall. So you can see the
Lincoln Memorial. You can see the Washington Monument. It's a really
beautiful space, and every family loves that space. But there's a banister and a way you can
slide down it right near the solarium, and Jenna and Barbara Bush love showing Sasha and Malia
Obama how to do that. And I think also the fact that they were two sisters who were moving into
the White House and two sisters leaving.
It was, and also how historic it was when the Obamas moved in as the first Black family in the White House.
I interviewed butlers who told me, I mean, mostly Black butlers from the D.C. area, and they said they never thought they would see this day.
They had tears in their eyes.
Both Mrs. Obama and President Obama have said that the butlers reminded them of members of their own family, especially Michelle Obama.
She had relatives in Chicago who worked in the service industry.
And so there was a special bond that the Obamas had to the staff at the White House.
You mentioned the occasional bitter feelings and rivalry that some of these first ladies must inevitably feel.
But I suppose, too, that this is a very small sorority and they can develop great empathy for each other.
What might be some ways that they do support each other, even perhaps after they left the White House? by that question when I was working on this book. And I went to the presidential libraries and dug through letters and saw this really intense friendship that Lady Bird Johnson had developed
with a lot of first ladies, including Barbara Bush, who was a Republican from Texas. They both
were from Texas. They had that in common. And then Lady Bird was second lady when Jackie Kennedy was first lady. And so she was there when JFK was killed.
She was in the motorcade.
She was on the plane.
So she saw the trauma of that very closely.
And she wrote a letter to Caroline Kennedy.
And this was after Jackie's death.
And then she wrote another letter after John Jr.'s death.
So in 1994, after Jackie died, she wrote about Jackie's funeral to Caroline and Jackie's daughter and said,
As I looked at the faces of the crowds, and they were deep everywhere along the streets, I felt the keen edge of their sorrow.
And to me, that just shows what a beautiful writer Lady Bird was.
And she wrote every single day she was in the White House. And there's a
book called The White House Diary, which for anyone interested in what it's like to be a
First Lady, I really recommend it. And then after John died, she wrote to Caroline. You know, this
was just a few years after her mother dies, her brother dies in the plane crash. And Lady Bird
wrote, it's particularly painful for me thinking of all the suffering your
family has had to bear. He was the nation's child too, universally admired and respected,
a promising life too early ended. I thought that was really beautiful and touching, this woman who
had seen the tragedy up close and was trying to soothe Caroline's pain or let her know that she was
thinking about her.
There is this tension, though, between first ladies that maybe gets transcended by, I guess
I'll call it a sorority again.
For instance, I know Jackie Kennedy had a lot of trouble going back to the White House
for understandable reasons until Pat Nixon asked her back for the
unveiling of JFK's portrait there. Pat Nixon was a former rival during the 1960 campaign.
What did she do to make Jackie comfortable enough to come back to the White House?
Well, she said that the press would never find out, or at least not find out while the
Kennedys were there. And I think that was very important to Jackie. And that was the only way she would agree to come. It was 1971. The press was around,
but they had no idea that the most famous living first lady was there to have dinner with the
Nixons, to see her portrait and her husband's portrait unveiled. And it's just this really
beautiful moment where Tricia and Julie Nixon,
who were in their 20s at the time, took Caroline and John Jr., who were still young kids,
for this tour of the house where their last memories were of their father. I mean,
JFK Jr. probably didn't have much memory at all. But when they went into the Oval Office,
the Nixon family stood
outside to give the Kennedys a chance to kind of be there by themselves. And then they had dinner.
Jackie wrote Pat Nixon a letter. She said, can you imagine the gift you gave us to return to
the White House privately with my little ones while they are still young enough to rediscover
their childhood? And this part I like the most.
She said, the day I always dreaded turned out to be one of the most precious ones I've spent with my children.
May God bless you all.
Most gratefully, Jackie. For more than two centuries, the White House has been the stage for some of the most dramatic scenes in American history.
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You mentioned that the First Lady makes many, many decisions, maybe most of the household decisions in the White House.
And, you know, after the tour, the incoming First Family then has to move in and make it their own. I'm wondering, how does that work?
How do first ladies make the White House their home? Well, each one does it very differently.
It's interesting that Laura Bush didn't bring anything. She brought one chest of drawers,
because to them, the Bushes saw what it was like to live in the White House with her father-in-law. And Barbara Bush was saying, you know, you don't need to bring anything. It's all
there. It is like a very, very nice furnished Fifth Avenue penthouse. And that was how it was
described to me by Michelle Obama's press secretary. They can do a lot of work on the
second and third floors of the White House, but they can't change much on the
state floor. So if they want to redecorate the green room or the blue room, that is really off
limits. The house belongs to every American, right? But on the second and third floor, you know,
Michelle Obama brought in an interior designer who came in and kept some of the more formal
furniture, but then also was able to kind of bring a more informal vibe.
They were a very young family, relatively speaking.
And so she loved some furniture from anthropology that he would mix in
and pottery barn and things that were more accessible pieces
that were mixed in with these historic pieces
that are in the collection of the residents.
So, I mean, you do have historic pieces on the second and third floors of the White House.
And it's very important to note that I think that they always think of themselves as temporary custodians of the White House.
They never fully feel at home because how really, how could you?
You're never fully able to unplug, I would think.
And so that can be very stressful.
First ladies also get to choose their staff
and get very close to them.
This is more the domain of your first book.
What is the relationship
between first ladies and their staff?
First ladies are very close to the staff.
There are housekeepers who are upstairs making their beds, you know,
making their children's beds. I think it's interesting, Marianne Robinson, Michelle Obama's
mother, who just recently passed away, she insisted on doing her own laundry. And she had
really great relationships with the staff. She grew up middle class. So I think for her, living
in the White House was a strange experience, and she wanted to have a sense of normalcy.
But the Obamas were very close to an assistant usher named Reginald Dixon, and they brought Reginald Dixon to live with them in their home in D.C. after they left the White House.
So the relationship can be close.
It can also be difficult. I think the White House chef,
Roland Mesnier, told me a story that just really stuck with me. He had worked for five presidents,
from Jimmy Carter to President George W. Bush. And he said the hardest person for him to work
for was Nancy Reagan. And he described this dinner in 1982. It was a state dinner for the Queen of the Netherlands.
And Nancy Reagan had rejected all three dessert options that he made. So first ladies get to
taste the dessert before a state dinner. And finally, she told him that she wanted these
elaborate sugar baskets made. And this was two days before the state dinner. And he looked at her and just
said, but we only have two days. And she said, you have two days and two nights.
Throughout this conversation, I suppose I've been trying to remember the White House
is a family home, but it's not any ordinary family home. And most families who reside there probably
cannot find the sort of privacy that we private citizens are accustomed
to. Is privacy even possible in the White House? I think it's something every first family struggles
with. I think that the resident staff, about 100 people, and there are about a dozen of whom who
come in real constant contact with the family, make it their goal in life to make the first
family feel comfortable.
You know, if there is an argument going on on the second floor and the housekeepers are there,
the people who last in that job know to very quietly get the job done and leave. And I think one incident in August of 1998 with Hillary Clinton during the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal,
this is right before her husband's public confession. She called Worthington White, who was an usher at the
White House, and he just described how she just wanted to sit by the pool with a book and how
hard it was for her to actually do that. He got this call where she said, I just want to sit there.
I don't want to see anybody. And he had to clear, you know, make sure that there were no tours going on, that she could actually just walk by herself with Secret Service kind of behind her. That kind of says it all. And then after she sat outside for a little bit, she grabbed him by his hands and looked him in the eyes and just said, thank you so much. The fact that that would be something that happens, like for any one of us, going and
sitting alone with a book is really not a big deal. But to Hillary Clinton, it meant something.
And I think that illustrates what you're saying, how hard it is to have that be your home.
Yeah, it makes me think that if an hour alone with a book is that difficult,
you might want to literally escape the White House. And so that prompts my next question.
Have they? Yeah. There are some amazing stories of, you know, Hillary Clinton,
where she walked around the city in disguise, right? Like with a hat and sunglasses on.
Caroline Kennedy, her French teacher, would take her on a city bus and take
her grocery shopping, go to museums. Jackie Kennedy said, you know, I really want her to
get out of this place a little bit. So the idea that you would want any semblance of normalcy
makes sense to me. And Marianne Robinson, Michelle Obama's mom, could walk around because people didn't really recognize her. So she would go to the CVS. She would go to the mall. I think that
from Michelle and Barack Obama, I never found out whether they ever left. I don't think they ever
really could. So that's why presidents often go, you know, biking or golfing, just a way to get out
of that fishbowl for a little bit.
I'm glad you brought up the search for normalcy in this very abnormal environment. Because for First Ladies who have children, juggling motherhood and the work of the First Lady and this peculiar
fishbowl they're in must be very, very difficult. Is it possible at all to try and have a normal
family life? You know, I think the Bush family was able to do it, Barbara Bush and George
H.W. Bush, probably because they had grandkids, you know. They were older, so they had the very
different experience from raising young kids in the White House. I think that Michelle Obama's
talked about having her daughter's friends come over and having to get clearance, you know,
social security numbers and background
checks on their parents and everything. It's just not a normal environment. And I think that's why
the Obama daughters became close with Biden's granddaughters because they were similar ages.
And these are the only other people who really, again, understand what this world is really like.
I have to write down this tip to get social security numbers and background checks on
all my daughter's friends.
We really can't talk about first ladies and not mention fashion, something the press
certainly pays attention to.
Can you share some anecdotes about first ladies, their dress, their appearance, and how they
embraced it and how they pushed back?
Well, I mean, when Michelle Obama got bangs, it was like a big deal, you know,
it was kind of ridiculous. And she said, can everybody stop looking at my bangs and actually listen to what I have to say? And it's a larger kind of commentary on the way women are viewed
in our society, right? That it's a lot about fashion. It's a lot about appearances. For first ladies,
they can make fashion choices like Melania Trump with the I really don't care, do you jacket that
become headline news around the world. For state dinners, first ladies can wear dresses that are
controversial depending on, you know, which designer they're supporting. And there was some hubbub
about why Michelle Obama wasn't wearing a certain designer that every other first lady had. And
she was really all about promoting young designers, people of color, people who wouldn't
have that opportunity if it were not for her. Because when she wore a dress at a state dinner,
it was in the news immediately who that designer was.
So she was using her platform to raise up other voices.
But of course, it is not always a fashion show.
Sometimes first ladies just hang out in sweats.
It was a big deal when Jackie Kennedy wore pants in the White House back in the 1960s.
So sometimes they can just relax in their robe.
Throughout this conversation, we've kind of discussed how nonpartisan first ladies try to be and are kind of forced to be. But they are also involved in politics,
whether they want to be or not, just by virtue of being married to the president.
Some first ladies get involved in politics more than others.
Which do you think might have been more political creatures, and how did that go for them? Well, Eleanor Roosevelt is not a huge character in my book.
I wanted to start with Jackie Kennedy because I wanted to talk to people who remembered her. And
I mean, as time passes, so many of my sources have since passed away. So that's really why I
didn't cover Eleanor Roosevelt as much. You know, her husband's advisors told her to stick to
her knitting, which is kind of funny to look at because here's one of, I think, the most important
first ladies because she was the person who paved the way for Hillary Clinton, right? She was the
one who said she would use her intellect to get involved in issues, to talk to voters. I think the most important role that First Ladies
play politically, aside from softening their husbands' images during a campaign, is really
going out and being able to speak to the public and to report back to their husbands about what's
going on in the world. People are slightly less intimidated by First Lady. She can do roundtables. She can travel slightly more
freely than the president. Rosalind Carter had weekly meetings with Jimmy Carter, and she
insisted on it. And they would have a lunch every week in the Oval Office. And she would come with
her binder, and she would have a list of questions for him. And he would kind of joke, like, come on,
not again. You know, this is another work meeting.
But she did it so that she would know what to tell people when they asked her about the economy or what was going on in the country and what he was going to do about it. And people told her they
cared a lot about mental health issues. And she came back to him and said there should be a mental
health focus in his administration. And she made that happen. So I think first ladies can be conduits for their husbands to the real world.
And they're not only just conduits, they're confidants, sounding boards, important,
close people that perhaps the president's only place to really talk honestly and earnestly.
And there's a story about Jackie Kennedy during one of the most perilous moments in our country, the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Tell us about that.
Well, it was in October 1962.
And so this is the famous 13 days in the White House where the country was on the brink of a nuclear war, really, because it was discovered that the Soviets had put nuclear missiles in Cuba that could hit the U.S. within several minutes.
And so JFK called Jackie Kennedy, who had just, after an hour and a half long drive from D.C., she had just gotten to their estate in Virginia, in the countryside.
Caroline was five, and John F. Kennedy Jr. was two.
And he called her up and said, you know, can you come back?
And she said, what do you mean? I just got here.
And he said, I need you back here right now.
And so she went back to the White House and was his confidant for those 13 days.
And I think her role is really underestimated.
You know, she would walk around the South Lawn with him as he kind of mulled over his options.
He would tell Jackie about
telegrams he had gotten from the Soviet leader, Khrushchev. I mean, it was such an intense time.
And then when the cabinet members' wives started talking about leaving Washington if there was a
nuclear strike, Jackie told him, I am going to stay here with you. I want to walk out on the
South Lawn with you and the children, and we will die with you. You know, I can going to stay here with you. I want to walk out on the South Lawn with you and the
children and we will die with you. You know, I can't imagine not being with you. That's a pretty
incredible thing. And she was very much a part of how he worked through the Cuban Missile Crisis.
And I don't think people give her credit for that.
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In November 1991, media tycoon Robert Maxwell mysteriously vanished from his luxury yacht in the Canary Islands.
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We've mentioned a few times examples of friendships that have blossomed between First Ladies.
Who are some of the women who really get along well or did get along well? First lady friends are, you know, Lady Bird
Johnson was very close with Hillary Clinton and Jackie Kennedy. Barbara Bush was very close with
Lady Bird. There is a great moment where Betty Ford, Rosalynn Carter, and Lady Bird Johnson were
on the porch of Lady Bird's Texas house, and they were doing an interview together with Good Housekeeping,
and a tour bus drove by. Everyone couldn't believe it. I mean, the cameras came out,
and people were shocked to see three first ladies there together. They weren't expecting it.
But those women, you know, supported the ERA, together the Equal Rights Amendment.
They were very active in the feminist movement, regardless of what their husbands had to say about it, although all three of them had husbands that were fairly progressive.
But they were three very strong first ladies, so they were incredibly close for their entire lives. So that's some of the first lady friends, but what about the first lady foes? Well, Nancy Reagan had a very tough time with Barbara Bush. When Barbara Bush was second
lady, so the vice president's wife, she would actually walk around with a copy of this Kitty
Kelly biography of Nancy Reagan that was scathing, and she would have it with a book cover on it,
but it gave her some pleasure to walk by Nancy Reagan holding that book. There was a lot of
resentment between the two of them. I think that,
you know, from Nancy Reagan's perspective, her relationship with her kids was so bad. I mean,
years went by when she wouldn't speak to Patti Davis, right? That was a very bad relationship.
Patti Davis didn't even go to her grandmother's funeral, which was very difficult for Nancy
Reagan. And then you have Barbara Bush and this
huge family, a lot of warmth there, a lot of love there. So I think the two of them had very little
in common in that way. And then I think the class difference was a bit of a problem. They're both
very wealthy people, but the Bushes are patrician, old money, and the Reagans were kind of new money, Hollywood. So there was also
tension there. But if you look at Nancy Reagan's memoir, My Turn, which is just a great White
House memoir because it's very much an honest, real takedown of her critics. She's very harsh
in this book. She dedicates the book to Ronnie, who always understood, and to my children, who I hope will understand.
So that kind of says it all about Nancy Reagan's life was devoted to protecting her husband,
and nothing else mattered. And I think Barbara Bush's life was loving relationship with her
husband, but she was also very much focused on her kids. And so just two different approaches to being a wife and a mother.
Yeah, I think perhaps these are the two largest roles that First Ladies embody.
The mother of the first children, right?
But also the partner and, I think you said it earlier, the softening of the president's image.
First Ladies campaign for their husbands all the time.
Rosalind Carter certainly
did. And political campaigns get dirty. What is it like for first ladies to do this work?
And how do they handle the possibility of defeat? I think Barbara Bush took the defeat
by the Clintons very personally. Some of the comments that Bill Clinton made about Bush,
implying that he wasn't all that smart.
And there was definitely some residual anger there.
And I think for Barbara Bush, too, it's personal.
I mean, she was so popular.
She went to New Hampshire in 1992 to file the paperwork for her husband.
She was one of the most popular first ladies, probably because she was so apolitical.
She really did not wade into
politics. She and Laura Bush are pro-choice, but neither of them would ever have come out and said
anything when their husbands were in office. There's this understanding that you don't say
anything to contradict your husband's policies. And then you have a Hillary Clinton who's so
overtly political and has an office in the West Wing that ends up backfiring because people don't want to see that.
I think that first ladies can really soften their husbands.
I think Michelle Obama, for instance, would talk about Barack Obama, you know, not picking up dirty laundry off the floor.
It's a way of humanizing these larger-than-life characters that we put on
a pedestal. And it's the wife that can really take them down a peg in a playful way. That's
how they're the most effective, I think, politically. The presidency is probably
rightfully regarded as one of the most stressful jobs anyone can have. And if you just look at,
for instance, Obama's hair color over the several
months in his first term, you know it has physical effects. How do first ladies manage their stress?
I think that they exercise. Michelle Obama was often exercising. She had a trainer in the White
House. Michelle Obama was such a unique first lady, the first Black first lady
who dealt with a tremendous amount of racism, and she had no one else to talk to about that.
There was no other first lady who had been in such a position, and the kind of vitriol that was
constant on social media about her was really painful. A lot of them close off their consumption
of news. Pat Nixon, you know, when Watergate was at its height, she didn't read the newspaper.
And in some ways, I think it's kind of strange to say, well, we kept them from reading the
newspaper since everything's on the phone anyway. But I think some first ladies really try not to engage with social media or cable news
because it would drive you absolutely crazy. Now, for your book, First Women, you were asked
to write an interesting update, I guess two updates for the paperback edition in 2016,
because we did not know at that time the outcome of the election. So you wrote a chapter on both Melania Trump
and Bill Clinton, who would have been the first first gentleman. We know that Hillary did not
win the election, but I'm very curious, what did you write about Bill? Well, I wrote an op-ed about
Bill Clinton for the New York Times, and this was, I just looked back at it. It's funny to see,
it was in July of 2016, when the majority of people did think that Hillary Clinton was going to win
the election. And I talked to people like Ronald Reagan's social secretary who talked about a male
spouse kind of tiptoeing into uncharted territory. And they said, Reagan's social secretary,
Gail Hodges-Burt, said a male spouse who wasn't a former president is a way to tiptoe into this uncharted territory instead of blasting our way into it.
The title of the op-ed was Bill Clinton, a perfectly imperfect first gentleman.
The idea that he would come to the White House with all this knowledge, but also all of this baggage.
And how would that maybe make it easier for first ladies in the
future. No wife with Clinton's history of cheating and other things would be unscathed. I mean,
the very idea that Jill Biden was divorced was actually kind of a thing. Betty Ford was also
divorced. But an idea of a woman cheating on her husband, that's something that I
think we have a hard time accepting. And the idea that these first ladies are held up to these
different moral code of ethics than a man would be is interesting to me. But I think that Bill
Clinton would have been more of an envoy to other countries and kind of a diplomat than just a
presidential spouse.
So it's hard to imagine him having an office
in the East Wing.
And finally, I suppose a difficult question.
Which modern first lady do you think
has had the biggest impact?
It's really hard to answer that question
because so many of them have had a big impact.
I mean, Michelle Obama,
just simply by being the first Black First Lady,
is such a huge moment in our history. And I also think Betty Ford, for what she did after
she was in the White House. I mean, she had breast cancer when she was First Lady.
Something I found very interesting was that Gerald Ford's press secretary, who I interviewed
for the book, described to me of how they had put together a press release
to say that Mrs. Ford was going to be undergoing a minor medical procedure and basically just kind
of to shut down questions about her absence. But Betty Ford said, I want you to tell them exactly
what's happening. I have breast cancer. I'm getting a mastectomy. This is what's happening. And because she did that, so many women got mammograms and checkups. Gerald Ford described
receiving so many letters from husbands thanking him for what she did and for supporting her the
way he did. And I mean, she saved countless lives by doing that. And breast cancer was actually
something people didn't talk about because the word breast was somehow, I don't know, controversial or offensive at the time.
And so she changed the way we talk about breast cancer. And then what she did by opening the
Betty Ford Center in 1982 and talking about her own struggles with addiction was also really
life-changing for many people. So I tend to agree with Gerald Ford
that when the final tally is taken,
her contributions to the country are bigger than his.
It's the way she shaped the culture
that has been such a lasting legacy for her.
And Jill Biden's an important first
because she is the first First Lady
to ever have a job outside of the White House.
And that is a hugely important thing.
She's an English teacher at a community college.
She wanted to always have her own profession.
And she's the first woman to ever do it, which hopefully will set the stage for the future.
Well, Kate Anderson Brower, thank you so much for speaking with us again on American History Tellers.
Thank you, Lindsay. That was my conversation with journalist Kate Anderson Brower, thank you so much for speaking with us again on American History Tellers. Thank you, Lindsay.
That was my conversation with journalist Kate Anderson Brower.
Her book, First Women, The Grace and Power of America's Modern First Ladies, is available now from HarperCollins.
From Wondery, this is the sixth and final episode of our series, First Ladies for American History Tellers. In the next season, four U.S.
presidents have been assassinated while in office, and many other assassination attempts have failed.
We'll look at three of those deaths and a near miss to see what motivated these murderous plots
and how they changed the course of our nation's history.
If you like American History Tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free right now
by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free
on Amazon Music. And before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey
at wondery.com slash survey. American History Tellers is hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham, for Airship.
Sound design by Molly Bach.
Music by Lindsey Graham.
Additional writing by Ellie Stanton.
Voice acting by Cat Peoples.
This episode was produced by Polly Stryker and Alida Rozanski.
Our senior interview producer is Peter Arcuni.
Coordinating producer is Desi Blaylock.
Managing producer, Matt Gant. Senior managing producer, Peter Arcuni. Coordinating producer is Desi Blaylock. Managing producer, Matt Gant.
Senior managing producer, Ryan Moore.
Senior producer, Andy Herman.
Executive producers are Jenny Lauer-Beckman,
Marsha Louis, and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondery.
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