Pat Nixon
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JoinBritannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work!Pat Nixon, néeThelma Catherine Ryan, bynamePat orPatricia, (born March 16, 1912,Ely,Nevada, U.S.—died June 22, 1993,Park Ridge, New Jersey), Americanfirst lady (1969–74), the wife ofRichard Nixon, 37th president of the United States, who espoused the cause of volunteerism during her husband’s term.
Nicknamed “Pat” because of her birth on the eve ofSt. Patrick’s Day, Thelma Catherine Ryan was the daughter of William Ryan, a miner and farmer, and Katarina Halberstadt Bender Ryan, a German-born widow and mother of two boys. Soon after Pat was born the family moved to Artesia, California, where William attempted to eke out a living at truck farming. The family’s economic situation worsened following her mother’s death, from cancer, in 1926; her father died of lung disease in 1930.
An orphan at 18, Pat worked at a bank to put herself through a year at Fullerton Junior College. In 1932 she was paid to drive an elderly couple from California toNew York City, where she lived for two years, working as a secretary and as a hospital X-ray technician. Returning to California, she supplemented her savings with a variety of jobs and enrolled as a merchandising major at theUniversity of Southern California, where she earned a degree with honours in 1937.
She taught business courses at Whittier High School, where she joined an amateur theatre group and met a fellow thespian, lawyer Richard Nixon. The couple married on June 21, 1940, at the Mission Inn inRiverside, California. While her husband served in the U.S. Navy (1942–46), she worked at a bank and later at the Office of Price Administration in San Francisco.
In 1946 Pat participated in her husband’s successful run for Congress by doing research on his opponent and writing and distributing campaign literature. After the birth of their two daughters, Tricia in 1946 and Julie in 1948, she tried to separate the family’s political and personal lives and preserve some privacy for her children.
Pat’s attitude toward politics changed in the 1952 election, when her husband, the vice presidential nominee on the Republican ticket, was forced to defend himself from charges that he had kept a secret slush fund for campaign expenses. In his nationally televised “Checkers” speech, Richard bared the family finances and spoke admiringly of Pat, noting that she did not own a fur coat but only a “respectable Republican cloth coat.” Although the speech caused an outpouring of support for Richard and turned Pat’s name into a household word, it soured her on politics.
Extremely active as the vice president’s wife (1953–61), Pat made many official appearances at luncheons and charity events, but it was her international travel with her husband that gained her the most attention. She accompanied him to 53 countries around the world. Media coverage of their visit to Caracas,Venezuela, where the vice president’s motorcade was attacked by hostile crowds, increased respect for the Nixons’ courage.
Richard’s unsuccessful run for the presidency in 1960 led to their temporary retirement in California, and Pat seemed glad to leave politics behind. His failure to win the governorship of California in 1962 increased her distaste for politics. In 1963 the Nixons moved to New York City, and she settled into private life as the wife of a lawyer.
When her husband was elected president in 1968, Pat Nixon took up the cause of volunteerism, urging people to donate their time and services to hospitals, schools, day care centres, and nursing homes. She also opened theWhite House to groups not formerly welcomed or easily accommodated, including the deaf and the visually impaired, people who did not speak English, the physically handicapped, and those who had work schedules that permitted only evening visits.
As first lady she traveled thousands of miles, speaking to school groups and representing her husband on visits toGhana,Côte d’Ivoire, andLiberia in 1972 and Venezuela andBrazil in 1974.Stoic and tireless, she once remarked, “I do or I die but I never cancel out.”
Although she received far less publicity for her efforts, Pat received more donations of valuable furniture and artwork for theWhite House than hadJacqueline Kennedy. With the assistance of Clement Conger, who had overseen a similar project at theState Department, she directed the refurbishing of several state rooms in the White House. She also encouraged loans of prized paintings so that the hundreds of thousands of Americans who visited the White House could appreciate them.
Richard Nixon was forced to resign as president for his involvement in theWatergate affair, and onAugust 9, 1974, the Nixons retired, first to California and then toNew Jersey. She died oflung cancer in 1993 at her New Jersey home and was buried at the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace inYorba Linda, California.
Learn Morein these related Britannica articles:
first lady: 1953 to 1977Pat Nixon (1969–74), the wife of Richard M. Nixon, also had a long Washington apprenticeship, but she received little credit for her accomplishments in the White House. A dutiful consort, she traveled thousands of miles, giving speeches and greeting potential voters. She opened the White…
Richard Nixon: Early life and congressional career…Thelma Catherine (“Pat”) Ryan (Pat Nixon), a teacher and amateur actress, after the two were cast in the same play at a local community theatre. The couple married in 1940.…
first ladyFirst lady , wife of the president of the United States. Although…
- died
- June 22, 1993 (aged 81)
Park Ridge,New Jersey
- title / office
- first lady (1969-1974)

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