A quarter of a century has passed since Nancy Reagan was First Lady of the United States. Last week, she achieved another notable benchmark. Born in the working-class neighborhood of Flushing, Queens on July 5, 1921 to eventually live in the White House, Mrs. Reagan reached the age of 93.
In three months time, she will surpass the exact age that Betty Ford lived until but Nancy Reagan was already among the longest-living of First Ladies.
And whether it is a reflection of strong genes (dying at 99 years old, Mrs. Reagan’s mother was the longest-living among the mothers of First Ladies), finding a general well of public support in times of personal crisis, unsurpassed medical care or just a general trend of American women living longer, it is remarkable to see the dramatic rise in longevity among this infinitesimal demographic in the last half century.
Among the Ten Longest-Living First Ladies, six have served in the White House since 1945, the demarcation point of the post-World War II era when advanced medical technology began to boom.
In descending order (with the postwar First Ladies’ names marked in boldface) the ten longest-living to date are:
Bess Truman, died at age 97 in 1982; Lady Bird Johnson, died at age 94 in 2007; Betty Ford, died at age 93 in 2011; Nancy Reagan, currently age 93; Barbara Bush, currently age 89; Edith Wilson, died at age 89 in 1961; Anna Harrison died at age 88 in 1864; Sarah Polk, died at age 87, 11 months in 1891; Edith Roosevelt, died at age 87, 1 month in 1948; Rosalynn Carter, currently age 86
If there is some top-secret water fountain of youth hidden in the White House, this peculiar longevity record bodes well for another one of those postwar First Ladies.
Although she has yet to announce whether she’s decided to run for President in the 2016 election, her critics claim that former First Lady (and U.S. Senator and U.S. Secretary of State) Hillary Clinton’s age will be a factor working against her.
Were she to run and win the presidency in the 2016 November election, Hillary Clinton would celebrate her 69th birthday on October 27th a week earlier.
Contrary to some press reports it would not make her the oldest person elected President.
That record is held by Ronald Reagan who was also 69 years old when he was elected President in November of 1980, but who celebrated his 70th birthday in February of 1981, less than a month after being inaugurated.
Born in 1947, Hillary Clinton’s becoming First Lady in 1993 marked the ascendance of a a new generation; she and her two successors, Laura Bush and Michelle Obama, were all born since 1945 and were already in young adulthood when a more focused national effort was made towards understanding and improving women’s health.
As First Lady she led efforts on behalf of a variety of women’s health issues, successfully lobbying to increase medical research funds on women’s heart health and extending federal coverage of early breast cancer detection.
The group of First Ladies just previous to them were all born within the seventeen year range from 1912 to to 1929, but coming into their senior years in the flush of medical breakthroughs beginning in the Clinton Administration years in 1993.
So, is there something to this idea that the water drunk at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue has a magic chemical akin to human growth hormone in it?
Certainly the food served to families there is of the highest quality, but not likely the water.
In fact, there was speculation in 1989 that the water system might have been somehow tainted when President George Bush, and First Lady Barbara Bush both developed the autoimmune hyperthyroid ailment Graves Disease.
It may well be that, despite having to endure the losses and tragedies which come to all people, these women have been generally given the chance to lead fulfilling lives with the privilege of also helping others who do not.
TEN LONGEST-LIVING FIRST LADIES
Categories: First Ladies
Tags: Barbara Bush, Bess Truman, Betty Ford, Hillary Clinton, Lady Bird Johnson, longevity, Nancy Reagan, Rosalynn Carter
I think that it might go the other way: a man can’t make it to the presidency without the support and aid of a fantastically strong lady!
And thanks for the picture of Sally Polk! Great lady; deserves to be better known.
Hello Carl –
Any idea how our former First Ladies are doing mentally – are they all still “sharp”? Do they all keep up with political events, etc.?
On a separate note, funny to see Mrs. Reagan and Carter sitting together – I always thought there was no “love loss” between them – I certainly do not remember Mrs. Reagan every saying anything nice about Mrs. Carter.
I think once they’ve had the experience of living there, all President and First Ladies draw closer in understanding each other.
Carl – Really enjoy the topics you write about – new follower here (#480) – I wonder who the unluckiest (shortest-living) First Ladies were? Thanks for all your interesting historical work! -Glenn
Thank you very much. That’s an interesting topic – will look into it. Appreciate your subscribing.
Interesting article! I always enjoy your writing about the First Ladies.
Carl-I enjoyed this, as I do with all your writings. I appreciate and love your photos, (many of them are rare), they complement your work. I have long been fascinated with coverage of the interaction of the Presidential families and the images that it sends to the rest of the world. It shows the genuine bond they have with each other, and your positive, yet honest writings reinforce the history of these meetings. Thank you, keep writing and lecturing. Jeff
And sadly, the First Lady most often mistaken for being the youngest, died far to young. Jacqueline Kennedy died at just age 64.
Interesting piece Carl. As always.
I just noticed that in the 1991 photo at the top that all of the First Ladies that were alive at the time were present except for Jackie Kennedy. Do you know why she was absent?
Rosalynn Carter will turn 87 next month, not 88. August 18, 1927
Joseph – thank you for this. I actually had 87 years old in that nugget paragraph with all their ages, but need to correct the second reference to it and will do it now. Thank you for catching it – you are the numbers man!
Carl, great article. One correction to your caption of the Edith Wilson photo at the 1961 Inaugural Concert. Richard Coe was, I believe, the drama critic of The Washington Post, not the music critic.
Mark – thanks, will make correction.
I have sometimes thought that some widowed first ladies live so long because their entire adult lives have been exercises in adapting themselves externally to the demanding needs of their career-oriented husbands, while at the same time maintaining a rock hard sense of personal self upon which they stand unshakable when at last left on their own. Seen from another angle, super-achieving men often seem to have nothing left to live for once their work lives cease, while their wives, who have spent decades externally supporting them but internally cultivating rich and resilient lives of their own, could well end up with more than enough internal resources to give them reasons to go on into a vibrant post-political and post-marital future.
That’s a superior analysis which I think may well be a primary factor in this phenomena. Yet extreme stress experienced by those like Jackie Kennedy and Pat Nixon (coping with assassination and resignation) may well have taken a big toll on them. And birth women smoked heavily to reduce stress.
There’s also the role of humor in survival, whether one lives long or not. I’ve often thought Jackie Kennedy was one of the great comediennes of her age, for example. As when she supposedly broke some of the gloom of her final illness by exclaiming: ‘And to think I wasted all that time doing all those push-ups!’ Has anyone ever written a book on presidential or first lady humor?
You are right about that. Even when Mrs. Onassis lost her hair during her chemo treatment and took to wearing a turban, she joked to friends in the hospital that maybe now people still interested in her would finally stop wearing the dated old pillbox and start wearing turbans.
Rose Kennedy (Mother of JFK) is the longest living parents of either Presidents or First Ladies dying at 104.