Oral history interview with Hon. Anne Legendre Armstrong (1927-2008)
About the interview : Anne Armstrong discusses her experience in Washington as Co-chairman of
the Republican National Committee and service as a Counselor to the
President in the Nixon White House, dealing with women's organizations
and issues, among other responsibilities. In this interview, she
provides a wide-ranging assessment of women who made a difference in
that period in both the Executive Branch and the Congress. She discusses
aspects of her life, marriage, and work and the balance between them in
the broader context of feminism and women's rights. She reflects on the
approach to advancing equality for women that she felt comfortable with
in comparison to more radical feminists, but believes they had an
important role to play too. She discusses women in government in other
countries as well as in American state and local government.Anne Legendre Armstrong was born in New Orleans and graduated from
Vassar College. After work as a journalist, she married Tobin Armstrong,
a Texas cattle rancher. In 1966, she became involved in the Texas
Republican Party and was elected Co-Chairman of the Republican National
Committee in 1971. She was the first woman to deliver a keynote address
at the Republican National Convention in 1972 and became a Counselor to
the President in 1972. There she served on the president's Domestic
Council, the Council on Wage and Price Stability, and the Commission on
the Organization of Government for the Conduct of Foreign Policy. In
1976 President Ford appointed her U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain. She
served as chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board from 1981 to 1990, and the Secretary of State's Advisory Panel on
Overseas Security. She is currently chairman of the Executive Committee
of the Board of Trustees at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies in Washington, D.C., as well as a member of the Texas A&M
University Board of Regents. She received the Presidential Medal of
Freedom from President Reagan in 1987.
Oral history interview with Hon. Anne Legendre Armstrong (1927-2008)
From gwyn johns March 21st, 2024
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