Название | First Ladies For Dummies |
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Автор произведения | Marcus A. Stadelmann, PhD |
Жанр | Зарубежная публицистика |
Серия | |
Издательство | Зарубежная публицистика |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781119822219 |
Ranking U.S. First Ladies
One of the best academic evaluations of U.S. First Ladies was released in 2014, in a joint effort by both the Siena College Research Institute and C-SPAN (National Cable Satellite Corporation), a network created to show public affairs programming. The survey was conducted in 2013, and its results were released in 2014. A total of 242 experts on First Ladies in the United States were asked to rank the First Ladies based on ten criteria (see the section “Discussing ten evaluation criteria”). Rankings of all the First Ladies are rare, they are-time consuming, expensive, and there isn’t much demand for them.
Note: Because the study was done in 2013–2014, it obviously doesn’t include either Melania Trump or Dr. Jill Biden, who became First Lady in 2017 and 2021, respectively. It further excludes Harriet Lane, who was President Buchanan’s niece and became his First Lady because he was a lifelong bachelor. I and many other academics do count her as a First Lady, and in Chapter 21, she is among my choices for the ten most influential First Ladies. Finally, the study excludes the four First Ladies who died before their husbands became president and Anna Harrison who never had a chance to became First Lady after her husband died a month into office.
The Siena Research Institute Survey
The Siena Research Institute Survey was the first survey on First Ladies in the United States. It’s conducted about every ten years, and it asks history and political science professors at American universities, as well as other experts on First Ladies, to rank the U.S. First Ladies on a scale of one to five based on ten separate categories (see the section “Discussing ten evaluation criteria”). Unlike surveys on American presidents, there were no other surveys to compare results to and thus the Siena College Research Institutes findings are the only comprehensive survey on U.S. First Ladies, establishing a benchmark for First Lady studies. Table 2-1 presents its rankings in order.TABLE 2-1 First Lady Rankings
Ranking | C-SPAN Academic Survey |
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1 | Eleanor Roosevelt |
2 | Abigail Adams |
3 | Jaqueline Kennedy |
4 | Dolley Madison |
5 | Michelle Obama |
6 | Hillary Clinton |
7 | Lady Bird Johnson |
8 | Betty Ford |
9 | Martha Washington |
10 | Rosalynn Carter |
11 | Barbara Bush |
12 | Laura Bush |
13 | Edith Roosevelt |
14 | Edith Wilson |
15 | Nancy Reagan |
16 | Bess Truman |
17 | Lou Hoover |
18 | Louisa Adams |
19 | Ellen Wilson |
20 | Lucy Hayes |
21 | Grace Coolidge |
22 | Julia Grant |
23 | Sarah Polk |
24 | Mamie Eisenhower |
25 | Helen Taft |
26 | Francis Cleveland |
27 | Julia Tyler |
28 | Lucretia Garfield |
29 | Caroline Harrison |
30 | Elizabeth Monroe |
31 | Mary Lincoln |
32 | Abigail Fillmore |
33 | Pat Nixon |
34 | Ida McKinley |
35 | Margaret Taylor |
36 | Florence Harding |
37 | Letitia Tyler |
38 | Eliza Johnson |
39 | Jane Pierce |
Source: Siena College Research Institute/C-Span study of the first ladies of the United States, 2014. Retrieved at: https://scri.siena.edu/first-ladies-study/
If you compare the results from the first survey taken in 1982 to the last one, conducted in 2014, the top ten and bottom ten First Ladies have been fairly consistent. At the bottom are Jane Pierce, Eliza Johnson, Letitia Tyler, and Florence Harding. Even Mary Lincoln falls into the bottom ten category. Mary Lincoln and Jane Pierce are considered neurotic women whose behavior and attitude made their husband’s life more difficult. Instead of being helpful during their husbands’ presidencies, they did the exact opposite and undermined their husband’s reputation and proved to be a handicap for effective policy making. Florence Harding is often blamed for being too ambitious and pushing her unqualified husband to become president. He turned out to be one of the worst presidents in American history. Letitia Tyler and Eliza Johnson, on the other hand, had no interest in being First Lady. Both claimed to be ill and made their daughters surrogate First Ladies for their husbands.
At the same time,