Betty Ford, beloved brash former First Lady, dies at 93 | The Salt Lake Tribune
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FILE - In this Thursday, Feb. 21, 1975 file picture, first lady Betty Ford prepares to enter an automobile in Washington after attending a Chamber of Commerce reception. Ford, the former first lady whose triumph over drug and alcohol addiction became a beacon of hope for addicts and the inspiration for her Betty Ford Center, has died, a family friend said Friday, July 8, 2011. She was 93. (AP Photo/Chick Harrity)
Betty Ford, beloved brash former First Lady, dies at 93

First Published Jul 09 2011 07:03 am • Last Updated Jul 09 2011 03:32 pm

LOS ANGELES • Betty Ford said things that first ladies just don’t say, even today. And 1970s America loved her for it.

According to Mrs. Ford, her young adult children probably had smoked marijuana — and if she were their age, she’d try it, too. She told "60 Minutes" she wouldn’t be surprised to learn that her youngest, 18-year-old Susan, was in a sexual relationship (an embarrassed Susan issued a denial).

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Thadis Box of Logan, an emeritus professor at Utah State University’s Wildland Resources Department, hailed Betty Ford as a good mother whose values and integrity was reflected in her sons Jack and Steven, who were students of his.

“I didn’t know Betty or President (Gerald) Ford well, but I can tell you that they raised good children,” said Box, who was dean of USU’s Natural Resources College when the Ford boys attended in the 1970s. “The Fords are a good family and one I was please to have in the White House.”

Box said both Betty and the late former president were personally involved in their children’s educations, too.

“They regularly checked up on their kids, corresponding with us to see how they were doing,” he said. “They were a real American family, not just a political family.”

Jack Ford graduated in 1975, going on to serve as a U.S. Forest Service firefighter and a National Park Service ranger. His younger brother, Steven, transferred to pursue animal science studies at California Polytechnic University.

— Bob Mims

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She mused that living together before marriage might be wise, thought women should be drafted into the military if men were, and spoke up unapologetically for abortion rights, taking a position contrary to the president’s. "Having babies is a blessing, not a duty," Mrs. Ford said.

The former first lady, whose triumph over drug and alcohol addiction became a beacon of hope for addicts and the inspiration for her Betty Ford Center in California, died at age 93, family friend Marty Allen said.

Family spokeswoman Barbara Lewandrowski said Betty Ford died Friday at the Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage. Other details of her death were not immediately available.

"She was a wonderful wife and mother; a great friend; and a courageous First Lady," former President George H.W. Bush said in a statement on Friday. "No one confronted life’s struggles with more fortitude or honesty, and as a result, we all learned from the challenges she faced."

While her husband served as president, Betty Ford’s comments weren’t the kind of genteel, innocuous talk expected from a first lady, and a Republican one no less. Her unscripted comments sparked tempests in the press and dismayed President Gerald Ford’s advisers, who were trying to soothe the national psyche after Watergate. But to the scandal-scarred, Vietnam-wearied, hippie-rattled nation, Mrs. Ford’s openness was refreshing.

Candor worked for Betty Ford, again and again. She would build an enduring legacy by opening up the toughest times of her life as public example.

In an era when cancer was discussed in hushed tones and mastectomy was still a taboo subject, the first lady shared the specifics of her breast cancer surgery. The publicity helped bring the disease into the open and inspired countless women to seek breast examinations.

Her most painful revelation came 15 months after leaving the White House, when Mrs. Ford announced that she was entering treatment for a longtime addiction to painkillers and alcohol. It turned out the famously forthcoming first lady had been keeping a secret, even from herself.

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She used the unvarnished story of her own descent and recovery to crusade for better addiction treatment, especially for women. She co-founded the nonprofit Betty Ford Center near the Fords’ home in Rancho Mirage, Calif., in 1982. Mrs. Ford raised millions of dollars for the center, kept close watch over its operations, and regularly welcomed groups of new patients with a speech that started, "Hello, my name’s Betty Ford, and I’m an alcoholic and drug addict."

Although most famous for a string of celebrity patients over the years — from Elizabeth Taylor and Johnny Cash to Lindsay Lohan — the center keeps its rates relatively affordable and has served more than 90,000 people.

"People who get well often say, ‘You saved my life,’ and ‘You’ve turned my life around,’" Mrs. Ford once said. "They don’t realize we merely provided the means for them to do it themselves, and that’s all."

In a statement Friday, President Barack Obama said the Betty Ford Center would honor Mrs. Ford’s legacy "by giving countless Americans a new lease on life."

"As our nation’s First Lady, she was a powerful advocate for women’s health and women’s rights," the president said. "After leaving the White House, Mrs. Ford helped reduce the social stigma surrounding addiction and inspired thousands to seek much-needed treatment."

Mrs. Ford was a free spirit from the start. Elizabeth Bloomer, born April 8, 1918, fell in love with dance as a girl in Grand Rapids, Mich., and decided it would be her life. At 20, despite her mother’s misgivings, she moved to New York to learn from her idol Martha Graham. She lived in Greenwich Village, worked as a model, and performed at Carnegie Hall in Graham’s modern dance ensemble. "I thought I had arrived," she later recalled.

But her mother coaxed her back to Grand Rapids, where Betty worked as a dance teacher and store fashion coordinator and married William Warren, a friend from school days. He was a salesman who traveled frequently; she was unhappy. They lasted five years.

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