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Here's how DC can pay respects to Rosalynn Carter

The former First Lady passed away Sunday at the age of 96.

WASHINGTON — The nation is mourning the death of Rosalynn Carter. The former First Lady passed away Sunday after entering hospice care on Friday. The White House Historical Foundation is allowing the public to send condolences.  

Beginning, Monday, November 20, 2023 at 9 a.m., an official condolence book for First Lady Rosalynn Carter will be available for the public to sign at the White House Visitor Center, located at 1450 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.

“First Lady Rosalynn Carter worked extensively with the White House Historical Association to expand the White House’s collection of paintings,” noted Stewart D. McLaurin, President of The White House Historical Association. “As honorary chair of the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, she supported the establishment of the private, non-profit White House Preservation Fund in 1979 as an endowment for future residents.”

Mrs. Carter herself once reminisced of her years in the White House: “I remember our excitement in discovering the warehouse of items stored from past administrations…I’m grateful to Jackie Kennedy for founding the White House Historical Association and ensuring the preservation of this unique chapter in our nation’s history.”

Rosalynn Smith was born on August 18, 1927, in Plains, Georgia to Edgar and Allie Smith. She graduated from Georgia Southwestern College in 1946 and married her husband Jimmy that same year. The Carters had three sons: John William, James Earl III, Donnel Jeffrey, and a daughter, Amy Lynn.

Mrs. Carter played an important role in her husband’s political campaigns. During his run for president in 1976, she traveled independently throughout the United States and was famous for her friendly manner.

During her time in the White House, Mrs. Carter attended cabinet meetings and briefings whenever possible, and often represented her husband at ceremonial occasions. She also created the Office of the First Lady, which has since served as the workplace for the initiatives the first lady and her staff pursue. She focused national attention on the performing arts and took a strong interest in programs to aid local communities and the elderly. Mrs. Carter also served as the honorary chairperson of the President's Commission on Mental Health, directing efforts that later contributed to the passage of the 1980 Mental Health Systems Act.

After leaving the White House, Mrs. Carter co-founded the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia where she managed an active mental health program and promoted human rights, conflict resolution, and childhood immunization. In 1984, she published her autobiography First Lady From Plains. She also shared her community service talents with Habitat for Humanity, an organization that builds homes for the underprivileged.

In lieu of flowers, the Carter family requests that you consider a contribution to the Carter Center Mental Health Program or the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers.

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