Counsellor to the President

Fragmentary office files of speeches and memoranda of Armstrong and her administrative assistant Beth Gordon, August-December 1974; and routine personal correspondence, 1973-74.

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    Scope and Content Note

    Anne Armstrong was named Counsellor to the President with Cabinet rank by Richard Nixon in 1973, becoming the first woman to hold that position. She remained as Counsellor when Ford took office, providing assistance in established areas of responsibility as well as assuming new roles in the Ford White House. She resigned in December, 1974 because of family health problems which entailed a return to Texas, but she continued to serve in several posts during the following year. In 1976, Ford appointed her Ambassador to Great Britain and considered her a possible vice-presidential running mate.

    Counsellor Armstrong established the first White House Office of Women's Programs in 1973 to provide a liaison between President Nixon and women and women's groups. It sought to recruit women appointees to high level government positions and to assist in gaining greater employment opportunity for women in the federal sector through regulation and legislation. Assisted by Patricia Lindh and Director Karen Keesling, Armstrong continued to address these concerns in the Ford administration. After her resignation, she joined Lindh and Keesling as a member of the U.S. delegation to the United Nations' International Women's Conference in Mexico City.

    As Chairman of the Federal Property Council in 1973-1974, she urged President Ford to continue its threatened existence with White House appropriated funds. The Council was responsible for review and reform of current policy toward federal real property and resolution of conflicting land use claims. She oversaw these functions and administered the Legacy of the Parks program which disposed of surplus federal land. On her departure, she advised Ford of alternate ways to provide these services within the federal government.

    President Ford appointed Armstrong to the eight-member Council on Wage and Price Stability which he created soon after he became President to identify and expose the causes of inflation. In his administration, she also chaired two Cabinet-level committees on the Bicentennial which addressed federal agency participation in the observance. She continued to work in these areas after her resignation as Counsellor.

    The Armstrong collection is very weak in documenting her various responsibilities. Materials are limited to some speeches and routine correspon-dence representing only fragments of her activities. Some areas of responsibility are undocumented, e.g. the Council on Wage and Price Control, liaison with Hispanics and coordination of youth programs. In some instances, Armstrong's successors in the White House inherited her files as well as her duties.

    Related Materials (May 1988)
    Additional files may be found in the White House Central Files (FG 6-11-1, 6-24, 6-27). Related materials may be found in the files of John Marsh (Bicentennial), Milt Mitler (Bicentennial) and Patricia Lindh/Jeanne Holm (Office of Women's Programs). Other related materials in currently unprocessed collections include the files of Pamela Powell (youth liaison), Thomas Aranda (Hispanic liaison), and Katherine Suttles (job applications from women recruits).

    Extent

    0.8 linear feet (ca. 1600 pages)

    Record Type
    Textual
    Donor
    Gerald R. Ford (accession number 77-107)
    Last Modified Date
    Collection Type
    Access
    Open.
    Processed by
    William McNitt, Nancy Evaldson, June 1988
    Biography

    Anne Legendre Armstrong


    Dec. 27, 1927 - Born, New Orleans, LA

    1949 - Graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Vassar College

    1966-68 - Vice Chairman, Texas Republican Party

    1968-73 - Republican National Committeewoman from Texas

    1968-74 - Trustee, Kennedy County (Texas) School Board

    1971-73 - Co-Chairman, Republican National Committee

    1972 - Secretary and keynote speaker, Republican National Convention

    1973-74 - Counsellor to the President; founder, Office for Women's Programs; Chairman, Federal Property Council; Chairman, Domestic Council Committee on Bicentennial and the Federal Agency Bicentennial Task Force; member, Council on Wage and Price Stability

    1975-76 - Member, Advisory Council to the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration; member, Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year

    1976-1977 - U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James (United Kingdom)

    1977-1983 - Member, board of directors of several major corporations, institutes and universities

    1980 - Co-Chairman, Reagan-Bush campaign

    1981 - Chairman, President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board