First Lady Pat Nixon was once a high school business teacher

Pat Nixon Business teacher and Former First Lady Pat Nixon.

Throughout American history, there are many examples of well-known personalities who were once schoolteachers. One of these is former First Lady Pat Nixon, who served as our First Lady from 1969 to 1974. She was employed during the 1930’s as a business teacher at Whittier Union High School in Whittier, California. In fact, Pat was working as an educator when she met her future husband, a young and ambitious city attorney named Richard Nixon.

Pat Ryan Nixon was born into a family of farmers on March 16, 1912, in Ely, Nevada, although she grew up in a rural community now known Cerritos, California. Her mother died of cancer in 1924, when Pat was only 12 years old. After her mother’s death, the young girl kept house for her father and two older brothers, Wiliam, Jr., and Thomas. It was a big responsibility for such a young girl.

In spite of her challenges, Pat graduated from Excelsior High School in 1929, and then worked her way through college working a variety of jobs. These jobs included retail sales, pharmacy manager, typist, and telephone operator. After her high school graduation, she first attended Fullerton Junior College in Fullerton, California, and then transferred to the University of Southern California, where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Merchandising, cum laude, in 1937.

A pretty and popular teacher, the former Miss Ryan instructed courses in typing, bookkeeping, business principles, and stenography. Her students remembered her fondly, writes daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower in a detailed and personal biography published in 1986. The book is called Pat Nixon: the Untold Story, and is available on amazon.com.

In the political arena, Pat served her country as the wife of the Vice President from 1953 to 1961, and then as First Lady during her husband’s presidency, which spanned the years of 1969 to 1974. Her major platform as First Lady was to promote volunteerism. Through this platform, she encouraged Americans to address social problems at the local level through volunteering at civic organizations, hospitals, and rehabilitation centers.

Pat Nixon passed away on June 22, 1993, in Park Ridge, New Jersey. She was 81 years old. She is interred next to her husband at the Richard M. Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda, California.

Lin Manuel Miranda pays tribute to his 8th grade teacher

Talented playwright, composer, lyricist, actor, and singer Lin Manuel Miranda was visibly moved yesterday when he received a special message from his eighth grade teacher Dr. Rembert Herbert. After watching the message, the Golden Globe Award winning Miranda paid tribute to his former teacher.

“Dr. Herbert’s the reason I’m sitting here talking to you,” Miranda confessed to David Begnaud of CBS News. “I wrote a musical instead of doing my homework for his class in eighth grade. He said, ‘You could be good at this, and you should stop hibernating in my class, and you should be doing this.’ Because we had a student-written theater club at my high school and Rembert’s the one who nudged me in that direction and he sort of changed my life forever with that,” Miranda remembered.

You can watch the segment from CBS This Morning below.

Read more about yesterday’s interview of Lin Manuel Miranda at the following link: www.cbsnews.com.

Author Terry Lee Marzell speaks to Delta Kappa Gamma Society in Highland, CA

Terry Lee Marzell

Author Terry Lee Marzell speaks at the monthly meeting of the Delta Kappa Gamma Society in San Bernardino.

Author Terry Lee Marzell made an appearance yesterday (January 10, 2019) at the monthly meeting of the San Bernardino Chapter of the Delta Kappa Gamma Society International. The meeting was held at St. John Bosco Church Hall at 28991 Merris Street in Highland, California.

Terry shared some of her favorite stories about remarkable teachers that are contained in her two published books, Chalkboard Champions and Chalkboard Heroes. She also shared information about the book she is currently working on, tentatively titled Chalkboard Politicians.

The Delta Kappa Gamma Society International is an international organization that promotes excellence in education, and supports professional and personal growth of women educators. The organization boasts members in 17 countries.

The Delta Kappa Gamma Society International was founded May 11, 1929, at the Faculty Women’s Club at the University of Texas, Austin. Instrumental in founding the organization was Dr. Annie Blanton, who was a member of the faculty of the University of Texas and a former Texas State Superintendent of Pubic Instruction. Dr. Blanton was passionate about the idea of an organization that provided peer support for women educators. The organization’s Alpha Chapter was installed later that year.

Following the meeting, chapter members assembled Jared boxes, activity boxes for children who are hospitalized.

Unnamed teacher earns Marzell’s (very informal) Kindness Towards Animals Award

I found this amazing photo online: A teacher passing out graded essays while holding a stray cat she found wandering around her campus earlier that day. I have no idea who this teacher is or what school she teaches in, but she gets my vote for my (very informal) Best Modeling of Kindness Towards Animals while Teaching Award. If anyone can identify her, I’d love it if you would drop me a message!

An unnamed teacher in an unnamed school holding stray cat.