Thursday, August 6, 2015

The Voting Rights Act of 1975: 40 Years Later

Jordan and Ford, signing of
the Voting Rights Act, 
August 6, 1975

On this date in 1975, President Gerald Ford signed the Reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act. Barbara Jordan was heavily involved that reauthorization process, because one of the core issues surrounding voters at the polls was the discrimination of non-English speaking voters that was happening in Texas.  The story of Jordan's involvement is complicated but fascinating, and Jordan always cited the passage of this Act as one of her career highlights.  Learn more about the Act at the links below:









Monday, June 8, 2015

Governor For a Day - 43 Years On

June 10, 2015 marks 43 years since Barbara Jordan received the honor of Governor For a Day in the state of Texas.  And to date, she is still the only African American woman to hold the title of Governor of state, even if it was for just one day.

In 1972, having served three terms in the Texas Senate, Jordan was elected president pro tempore (a Latin phrase meaning “for the time being”) of the Senate.  The president pro tempore is legally third in succession to the governor’s office, so what this meant was that Jordan was the first African American woman to preside over a legislative body in the United States and the first African American ever to preside over the Texas Legislature.  To make it official, Governor Preston Smith and Lieutenant Governor Ben Barnes both made arrangements to be out of the state for Jordan’s historic date, June 10, 1972.

The ceremony took place at the state Capitol in Austin.  Jordan, sworn in by her former TSU classmate Judge Andrew Jefferson, was surrounded by her family and friends.  Colleagues and well-wishers from all over Texas, including Delta Sigma Theta sorority sisters, bands, and choirs all came to celebrate Jordan’s historic moment.  One of Jordan’s official acts as Governor was to designate September 1972 as Sickle Cell Disease Control Month.

Jordan stated:  “I want you to celebrate this day as a new day of new commitment when a new idea and a new sense of future is to be born in Texas, a new commitment that Texas will not tolerate different based on race, a day when Texas will fight injustice and inequality whenever it finds it. “  Jordan’s triumph, however, was marked with tragedy.  Shortly after Jordan was sworn in, her father, Benjamin Jordan, suffered a stroke and was rushed to a local hospital where he died the next day.  Jordan later remembered the last time she spoke to her father: “I walked into the room and there he was with all his teeth showing.  Just the most wonderful smile imaginable…I said, ‘Chief, you almost made the day…but you got to see me be governor.’  And he was still grinning.”

To see a slide show of the day's events and to hear Jordan's speeches, watch the video link below.


Friday, May 15, 2015

Graduation Day

High school diploma, Phillis Wheatley, 1952.
As we celebrate another term's end at Texas Southern University and graduation is upon us, we also think of Jordan and her academic achievements.  The Houston-born and -educated Jordan (at least until law school) was the recipient of over 30 honorary doctorates, the first given to her when she was only 10 years out of law school.  Jordan's family stressed the importance of an education to Barbara, and she in turn stressed that importance to her own post-Congressional classrooms at UT-Austin decades later.

Happy graduation day to our students at Texas Southern University and beyond!


Texas Southern University, 1956.
Boston University College of Law, 1959. 

Friday, February 20, 2015

Happy Birthday, Ms. Jordan - 79 years


Jordan at Bob Hope's birthday party, 1978.
February 21 marks the 79th birthday of Ms. Jordan.  In honor of the occasion, here's some not-often seen and candid shots of Jordan enjoying herself.  We often think of the public face of Jordan and her serious demeanor and no-nonsense presence.  But she was also a woman who also loved to laugh, had a great sense of humor and was adored by those who knew her intimately. 



Jordan at an event, occasion unknown, ca. 1973-74.
Rep. Barbara Holtzman (who served with Jordan in the
Watergate Hearings) is on the far left. 
Jordan, partner Nancy Earl and unknown student, at Jordan's
Onion Creek home in Austin, ca. 1982.  Jordan and Earl
often threw end-of-semester parties for Jordan's students.

Jordan with unknown student at Jordan's Onion Creek home,
ca. 1981.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

National Prayer Breakfast

Front of souvenir program.

Today marks the 62nd National Prayer Breakfast.  The National Prayer Breakfast (which is really a series of meetings, luncheons, and dinners) is a yearly event held in Washington, D.C., on the first Thursday of February each year, and has taken place since 1953.  Barbara Jordan had the honor of leading the prayer in 1978.  Here are some artifacts from her appearance. 

Jordan's itinerary for the event. 

Interior of souvenir program, from Jordan's collection.


Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Christmas Greetings, Congressional Style



Peter Rodino (D-New Jersey) – Rodino 
was the chair of the House Judiciary 
Committee when Jordan served during
the Watergate Hearings.

Happy holidays from the Barbara Jordan Archives and Special Collections!  As this year draws to a close, we're reflecting on a tumultuous year in politics with a lot of division among party lines.  In Jordan's time, though, things weren't as divided.  There was more "across-the-aisle" camaraderie and socializing regardless of party affiliation.  It might be argued that this spirit of such a time in American politics is reflected in a sampling of Jordan's greeting cards from colleagues during the 1978 holiday season; of the twenty-five cards featured here, one-third are from Jordan's Republican congress-mates. 

From a more aesthetic viewpoint, it’s interesting to consider the card designs and styles:  many feature traditional family photos and husband/wife poses, while others feature a depiction of Capitol Hill or the seal of the House.  The fashions, the hairstyles, decor...all depict an American era gone by and allow for a step back in time.  (Notice, too, the duplication of a card or two; most holiday cards were, and are, printed in-house and made available to House and Senate members.)  Regardless of who sent the cards, though, the themes of family and America prevail, and regardless of the issues at hand and the battles waged between political opponents, holiday greetings were still exchanged.  We hope you enjoy looking though the selection, and have a great holiday!


John Rhodes (R-Arizona)
Robert McClory (R-Illinois)

















                     


Berkley Bedell (D-Iowa)










                 
               










Charles H. Wilson (D-California)





















Charlie Wilson (D-Texas) – Wilson was
a long-time personal friend of Jordan’s and 
the two often socialized outside of work.


Paul Simon (D-Illinois)








Elizabeth Holtzman (D-NY)  
Holtzman was the only other woman
than Jordan to serve on the Watergate
Committee for the House.




















Gillis Long (D-Louisiana)



George Hansen (R-Idaho)
Walter Fauntroy (D-Washington DC)








James Corman (D-California)
Edward Jenkins (D-Georgia)

Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio)



Henry Waxman (D-California)


John Brademus (D-Indiana)
Senator Tennyson Guyer (R-Ohio)
Shirley Pettis (R-California)
Tom Corcoran (R-Illinois)
Senator Spark Matsunaga (D-Hawaii)
Abraham "Chick" Kazen, Jr. (D-Texas)

Jim Collins (R-Texas)

John Murphy (D-New York)
John Culver (D-Iowa)













Friday, July 25, 2014

On this date: Jordan and the Watergate Impeachment Hearings

July 25, 2014 marks the 40th anniversary of Jordan's historic statement on the impeachment of President Richard Nixon.  Jordan, then a freshman member of Congress and barely in office a few months, was given the unenviable task as a member of the Judiciary Committee to determine if there was evidence that the President had committed crimes that were considered impeachable offenses under the Constitution.

The Watergate Hearings held the country in its grip for months, dividing public opinion and shaking the confidence of Americans in their leaders and system of justice.  At the end of it all, America had a President leave office in disgrace, but for Jordan it was really the dawning of her career as a national politician.   In about 10 minutes, Jordan captured the attention and imagination of a country and provided a mini-civics lesson that has never quite been forgotten.  The statement she delivered is still considered today as one of the top 100 American speeches of all time by American Rhetoric. Please click here to view a virtual exhibit about Jordan's role in the Watergate Impeachment Hearings.

Friday, June 6, 2014

On this date...the Robert F. Kennedy Assassination


On this date in 1968, Jordan delivered a statement about the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, which occurred three days earlier.








Friday, May 9, 2014

Mother's Day 2014

Jordan photographed with her mother,
Arlyne Jordan, Governor For a Day,
June 10, 1972
For Mother's Day this year, we thought it would be interesting to put something together about Jordan and her mother, Arlyne.  Like many mother-and-daughter relationships, their relationship was complicated but loving, and at the root of it all Arlyne was extremely proud and supportive of all her daughters and their accomplishments.

Arlyne (born Phothie Arlyne Patten) herself was a speaker of note as a child and teenager, known as one of Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church's "star orators," speaking at youth revivals and missionary meetings. After she married and started a family, she gave up public oration, choosing to focus instead on family and church life.  Arlyne and her husband Benjamin both pushed their three daughters to work hard, study hard and make something of themselves. Jordan was to say later that one of the reasons she decided to become a lawyer and a public service was because she understood that Arlyne had given up something she loved and was good at to care for her family.
Arlyne Jordan outside the family
home on Campbell Street, ca. 1975

Arlyne wasn't exactly excited about Jordan's decision to go to law school (Jordan said later that Arlyne
wanted Jordan to choose something "more sensible"), but as Jordan went from strength to strength in her political career, her mother was among her strongest supporters.  Arlyne was even an inspiration and catalyst for some of Jordan's political work.

Jordan’s mother Arlyne was widowed in 1972 and as a homemaker she received no income other than a small widow’s benefit from the government; because Arlyne had not worked outside the home (like many women of that generation) she was not able to contribute to the Social Security system with wages, thus she was not eligible for benefits on her own.  Jordan realized that her mother was not the only woman in their community in the same financial situation.  Jordan decided there was a need for equality in the Social Security system in terms of recognizing “homemaker” as a legitimate occupation.  In her first Congressional term, Jordan set about cosponsoring a bill to provide Social Security benefits for homemakers.  The bill died at the House, but Jordan attempted to revive the bill a couple of years later with still no success.  Jordan continued to push for the bill during her terms in Congress though, and was also an active supporter for the ERA.  For Jordan, these were equality matters that hit close to home.
Jordan and her mother at
Jordan's portrait unveiling,
February 8, 1975

During Jordan's last term in Congress, Arlyne began to develop symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, and was cared for in Houston by daughters Bennie and Rose Mary.  Jordan visited her mother often, spending as many holidays with her as she could.  Arlyne passed away in 1997, one year after Jordan's death. Photographs that remain show Arlyne's pride in Jordan's accomplishments.

Friday, February 21, 2014

On This Date...Jordan's 78th Birthday

Invitation letter for "Barbara's
Birthday Bash," 1976.  Notice the
handwritten logistics and planning
on the left.
Today marks what would have been Congresswoman Jordan's 78th birthday.  We've found a couple of birthday-related items in the collection.

1976 was an election year, and also marked a milestone for Jordan, her 40th birthday. A "Barbara's Birthday Bash" was organized as a tie-in to Jordan's re-election campaign, and the guest list featured a "who's who" of the Houston political and social circles.  The suggested donation price of $10 a ticket shows how times (and economics) have changed for political campaigns since 1976.

Ticket for "Barbara's Birthday Bash," 1976.  The Imperial
Ballroom at the Hyatt Regency is still there today.




Birthday greetings from President Carter, 1978.
Jordan also received birthday greetings from President Carter on what turned out to be her last birthday as a Member of Congress.

Jordan's birthday gives us pause to reflect on a remarkable life and career. 

Thursday, February 6, 2014

On this date...Jordan's Portrait Unveiling

Sepia facsimile of Jordan's
portrait.  The original is
in full color. 
On February 8, 1975, Jordan's portrait was unveiled at the State Capitol in Austin.  Commissioned by the Texas Senate in 1973, the portrait was painted by noted Houston artist Edsel Crammer (who also painted Adelaid de Menil, George W. Bush and Rice University president Malcolm Gills, among other subjects), and the official unveiling and dedication was held in the Senate Chambers, where the portrait still hangs today.
Voice of Hope article, March 29, 1975

Jordan sits for Edsel Cramer, ca. 1974.
Photo by Bill Malone.

Just a fraction of the crowd that gathered at the State
Capitol to attend the unveiling, February 8, 1975.
Photo by Bill Malone.


Jordan and Cramer, State Capitol, Austin, Texas,
February 8, 1975.  Photo by Bill Malone.


A jubilant Jordan takes the podium as (from left)  Texas Senator
 Chet Brooks, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby Jr., Gov. Dolph Briscoe,
and others applaud, February 8, 1975.