Elizabeth Virginia Wallace Truman (February 13, 1885 – October 18, 1982), often known as "Bess Truman", was the wife of Harry S Truman and First Lady of the United States from 1945 to 1953.
After high school, she studied Miss Barstow's Finishing School for Girls in Kansas City, Missouri. In 1903, her father died, and she returned to Independence to be with her mother.
When Harry Truman became active in politics, Mrs Truman traveled with him and shared his platform appearances as the public had come to expect a candidate's wife to do. His election to the Senate in 1934 took the family to Washington, DC. He was elected Vice President in 1944. Upon F. D. R.'s death on April 12, 1945, Harry Truman took the President's oath of office--and she managed to look on with composure and was now the new First Lady.
The comparison to Mrs Truman's predecessor, Eleanor Roosevelt, was marked. Unlike Mrs Roosevelt, Mrs Truman held only one press conference after many requests from the mostly female press corps assigned to her. The press conference consisted of written questions in advance of which the replies (also on paper) were mostly monosyllabic accompanied by many "no comments". Her responses to whether she wanted her daughter, Margaret, to become President was "most definitely not". Her reply to what she wanted to do after her husband left office was "return to Independence", although she had briefly entertained the thought of living in Washington after 1953.
After her husband's death in 1972, Mrs Truman continued to live quietly, enjoying visits from Margaret and her husband, Clifton Daniel, and their four sons. She agreed to be the honorary chairman for the reelection campaign of Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Missouri).
She died in 1982 and was buried beside her husband in the courtyard of the Harry S Truman Library. At the time of her death at the age of 97 years, she was the longest lived First Lady of the United States, a record that still stands. In fact, no President has yet to exceed her 97 years with the nearest to reach that age being Ronald Reagan who died at 93. The only Presidential relative to live longer than Bess Truman was Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy who died at 104 in 1995. As of 2006, at age 93.5 years Lady Bird Johnson is the oldest surviving First Lady of the United States.
1885 births | 1982 deaths | American Episcopalians | First Ladies of the United States | Second Ladies of the United States | Kansas Citians
Bess Truman | בס טרומן | ベス・トルーマン | Bess Truman | 貝絲·杜魯門
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