Episoder
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Barbara Perry discusses the legacies that first ladies have left behind years after leaving the White House. This includes how their influence lives on through their post-White House work, their impact on the office of the first lady, and the historical sites and pop culture references that keep them in front of modern audiences. Show transcripts available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Newly Paul talks about some of the most famous first lady speeches in American history from Eleanor Roosevelt to Melania Trump. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Manglende episoder?
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Melody Lehn discusses the long and complicated relationship between first ladies and women’s rights from 1776 to Seneca Falls to suffrage to the Equal Rights Amendment. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Kelly Marino discusses how the advocacy work of first ladies contributed to various campaigns and movements. The forgotten work of Julia Tyler, Abigail Fillmore, Harriet Lane and Florence Harding is explored. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
From Thomas Jefferson’s daughter to James Buchanan’s niece to Grover Cleveland’s sister, other women have stepped into the first lady role and, unfortunately, been mostly forgotten. Mary Stockwell gives these women their rightful place in history. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Shaniece Bickham discusses how first ladies have used radio, television and social media to creatively share their messages with the public, starting in 1931 with Lou Hoover and through Michelle Obama. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
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Host Teri Finneman and guest Jodi Kanter discuss how several first ladies performed the role of mourner in chief following the deaths of their husbands. Martha Washington, Mary Lincoln, Lucretia Garfield, Florence Harding, Eleanor Roosevelt, Jackie Kennedy and Nancy Reagan illustrate how personal grief and national mourning converge when a president dies.
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
MaryAnne Borrelli gives insight on how first ladies are portrayed in movies about the presidency, ranging from Independence Day to Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Courtney Travers discusses public and media expectations that position first ladies as trendsetters and ideals of femininity. From Michelle Obama's J.Crew fashion to Nancy Reagan's signature red, from Jacqueline Kennedy's elegance and pillbox hats to Mamie Eisenhower's bangs and love for bubblegum pink, first ladies have used fashion as a means of communicating the first lady position. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Elizabeth Natalle explains how modern first ladies influence diplomacy, often championing democracy on the world stage and advancing progress in foreign policy, human rights, education, and health. Dolley Madison was an early social networker while the glamour of Jackie Kennedy abroad is still notable today. The critical role that Pat Nixon played in international relations is also explored, along with more recent first ladies Rosalynn Carter, Hillary Clinton, and Laura Bush.
Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Thomas Balcerski discusses the contributions that first ladies have made during wartime from the Revolutionary War to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. From Mary Lincoln's visits to Civil War veterans hospitals to Edith Wilson's involvement in World War I to Lady Bird Johnson navigating the Vietnam War, first ladies have been closely involved with the nation's wars. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Sarah Fling discusses the connections that early first ladies had to slavery and how few first ladies have engaged with civil rights. Martha Washington set a precedent for using enslaved labor at the president's house, and Dolley Madison never could have achieved her hostess reputation without it. Other first ladies, like Lou Hoover, who made the smallest of civil rights gestures by inviting a Black guest to the White House, faced tremendous blowback. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Tammy Vigil discusses the roles expected of first ladies and how they perform those roles can be an asset or a liability to the president. Dolley Madison's dinner party diplomacy, Eleanor Roosevelt's media savvy and Florence Harding's campaign advising all helped their husbands' political careers. Yet first ladies also have found themselves swept up in scandals and controversies during their time in the White House. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Author Lisa Burns discusses why the public is so interested in first ladies and how their influence endures 235 years after Martha Washington began the role. Show transcripts are available at https://www.quinnipiacpodcasts.com/the-first-ladies
Show music credit: "Winning Elevation" by Hot_Dope. -
Welcome to The First Ladies, a podcast that reflects on the fascinating legacies of the women forever tied to the White House.