
JULY 11

Lady Bird Johnson
Born December 22, 1912 in Karnack, Texas
Died July 11, 2007
Lady Bird
Johnson
Origianal Name: Claudia
Alta Taylor
As a child, a family
nurse declared she was as "pretty as a
ladybird." The nickname stuck. She graduated
from the University of Texas at Austin with a
bachelor's degree in art followed and continued
on there studying journalism, with the plan to
become a newspaper reporter.
In the summer of 1934 she met Lyndon Baines
Johnson who was a Congressional aide. They
married in November 1934, just seven weeks after
their first date. She borrowed from her
inheritance to help finance his first election
campaign.
As first lady, she supported the war on
poverty, the Headstart Program, and worked
for the beautification of Washington,
DC. Following the presidency, Lady Bird Johnson
wrote the 800-page White House Diary which
detailed her husband's life including the
aftermath of the Kennedy assassination. She also
remained active in beautification projects.In
the1960s, she planted bulbs and trees along
roadsides to call attention to the growing crisis
of habitat and species loss. Lady Bird Johnson
created the First Lady's Committee for a More
Beautiful Capital and her work became the first
major legislative campaign launched by a first
lady, the Highway Beautification Act of 1965. Her
love for native wildflowers inspired her to
create the National Wildflower Research Center in
1982 near Austin, Texas. It was renamed in her
honor in 1998.
Lady Bird Johnson also remained outspoken on
women's rights issues, calling the equal rights
amendment, "the right thing to do." She
was honored with the country's highest civilian
award: the Medal of Freedom in 1977, and was
given the Congressional Gold Medal in 1988.
The widow of former President Lyndon Baines
Johnson, had suffered a stroke in 2002 that left
her with difficulty speaking. She died on July
11, 2007 at the age of 94.
|