Rose Mary Woods | |
|---|---|
Woods, 1970s | |
| Personal Secretary to the President | |
| In office January 20, 1969 – August 9, 1974 | |
| President | Richard Nixon |
| Preceded by | Gerri Whittington |
| Succeeded by | Dorothy E. Downton |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1917-12-26)December 26, 1917 Sebring, Ohio, U.S. |
| Died | January 22, 2005(2005-01-22) (aged 87) Alliance, Ohio, U.S. |
| Party | Republican |
| Watergate scandal |
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| Events |
| People |
Intelligence community |
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Rose Mary Woods (December 26, 1917 – January 22, 2005) wasRichard Nixon'ssecretary from his days in Congress in 1951 through the end of his political career. BeforeH. R. Haldeman andJohn Ehrlichman became the operators of Nixon's presidential campaign, Woods was known as Nixon'sgatekeeper.[1]
Rose Mary Woods was born in northeasternOhio in the small pottery town ofSebring on December 26, 1917.[2] Her brother was Joseph I. Woods, a sheriff ofCook County, Illinois, and longtime member of theCook County Board.[3]
Following graduation fromMcKinley High School, Woods worked for Royal China, Inc., the city's largest employer. She had been engaged to marry, but her fiancé died duringWorld War II. To escape the memories of her hometown, she moved toWashington, D.C. in 1943, working in a variety of federal offices until she met Nixon while she was a secretary to theHouse Select Committee on Foreign Aid. Impressed by his neatness and efficiency, she accepted his job offer in 1951.[4]
Woods developed a very close relationship with the Nixon family, especially withFirst LadyPat Nixon. She accompanied Vice President Nixon on his 1958 goodwill tour of South America but was injured by flying glass in theattack on Nixon's motorcade.[5]
Woods was President Nixon'spersonal secretary, the same position that she held from the time that he hired her until the end of his lengthy political career.
Fiercely loyal to Nixon, Woods claimed responsibility in a 1974 grand jury testimony for inadvertently erasing up to five minutes of the18½ minute gap on a June 20, 1972, audio tape. Her demonstration of how this might have occurred, in which she stretched to simultaneously press controls several feet apart (what the press dubbed the "Rose Mary Stretch"[6]), was met with skepticism from those who believed the erasures to be deliberate.
An expert analysis of the tapes conducted in January 1974 revealed that there were four or five separate erasures, and perhaps as many as nine.[7][8] The contents of the gaps remain unknown.[9]
After Nixon's resignation from the presidency, Woods maintained a sort of secret shrine to his memory in theExecutive Office Building until she was ordered to remove it.[4]
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Woods died on January 22, 2005, at McCrea Manor, a nursing home inAlliance, Ohio, near her hometown.[4] A memorial service was held at theRichard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum inYorba Linda, California. She had remained unmarried and had no children.[9]