Oral history interview with Hon. Barbara Hackman Franklin (1940-)
About the interview : Ranging from the influences of her parents and experiences in college
and M.B.A. program, Barbara Franklin's interview covers her career in
considerable depth in business, the White House, the Consumer Product
Safety Commission, her return to the business world, and service as
Secretary of Commerce. Through these experiences we can follow her
evolving ideas and the development and success of the program to recruit
women into leadership and middle management positions in the federal
government. Equally interesting are her reflections on the problems
women faced in this effort, the largely overlooked successful effort to
advance women's equality initiated by the Nixon Administration, and the
impact of this effort on the women's movement in America. Many of the
other women interviewed in this project are mentioned here and placed in
context.Barbara Franklin's role in the Nixon White House from 1971 to 1973 is
the keystone for advancing women into leadership positions in government
and also for this oral history project. After graduation from Penn
State in 1962, she became one of the first women to receive an M.B.A.
degree from the Harvard Business School in 1964. After working as
Assistant Vice President at Citibank, she accepted a position as Staff
Assistant to President Richard M. Nixon in 1971 with the mission to
recruit talented women into leadership positions in the federal
government. After great success she was nominated and confirmed as
Commissioner and Vice Chairman of the newly established Consumer Product
Safety Commission in 1973. After six years of service, she returned to
business, founding a consulting firm and becoming a director on a number
of corporate boards, a senior fellow of the Wharton School, and
director of the Wharton Government and Business Program at the
University of Pennsylvania, and at various times as a member of the
President's Advisory Committee for Trade Policy Negotiations, as a U.S.
delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. In 1992-93, she served
as the 29th Secretary of Commerce in the administration of President
George H. W. Bush. Returning to the private sector, she is now President
and Chief Executive Officer of Barbara Franklin Enterprises, a private
consulting firm. She is the recipient of numerous awards and honorary
degrees, and the Distinguished Alumni award from Penn State.
Oral history interview with Hon. Barbara Hackman Franklin (1940-)
From gwyn johns March 21st, 2024
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