Letitia Baldrige dies at age of 86

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

More than any hard and fast rules, Baldrige said frequently, kindness and consideration are at the heart of good manners.

“It’s thinking about somebody other than yourself. It’s being aware of other people and helping them out and not doing anything to offend them and just being nice,” she said in a 1990 interview with the Los Angeles Times. “And it hasn’t anything to do with money. It has everything to do with character.”

Letitia Baldrige was born on Feb. 9, 1926, in Miami and grew up in Omaha, Neb., the youngest of three children. Her father, Howard Malcolm Baldrige, was an Omaha attorney and state legislator who served two terms as a Republican congressman from Nebraska. Her brother Malcolm Baldrige would become commerce secretary in the Reagan administration.

Along with the future first lady, Baldrige attended Miss Porter’s School, a private boarding school for girls in Farmington, Conn. She received a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Vassar College and did graduate work in psychology at the University of Geneva in Switzerland.

In 1951, she embarked on a career with the State Department but first had to complete a course in secretarial skills. That accomplished, she took a job in Paris as social secretary and advisor to U.S. Ambassador David Bruce, then served in Rome in a similar capacity for Clare Boothe Luce, the U.S. ambassador to Italy.

Before joining the White House, Baldrige was the public relations director, and first female executive, at Tiffany & Co. in New York.

But she remained best known for her association with the Kennedy White House, where she helped create the enduring image of elegance, youthful energy and sophistication that the president and first lady came to represent.

Baldrige also arranged some of the couple’s most sophisticated events at the White House, including setting up a portable stage where they hosted concerts, ballets, musicals and Shakespeare plays.

“It was an extraordinary time,” Baldrige told The Dallas Morning News in 1998. “Mrs. Kennedy did things in ways that no one had ever done them before. There had never been hard liquor served at state functions. She provided open bars. There had never been jazz, or opera ... or theater. They brought it all in. The way the Kennedys entertained set a standard.”

Comments

Blogs

» Out Here
Out Here

Good or bad? Depends on who you ask

Sometimes readers ask for more good news in the paper. They say we in the media only cover the bad. But one person's positive is another's negative.
» Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman
Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman

My kind of game

I would have gladly paid to take in the game I covered Saturday morning in Morrison.

Reader Poll

Memorial Day weekend heralds the arrival of summer vacation season. How much time do you plan to spend on vacation?

1 week
2 weeks
3 or more weeks
No vacation this year