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- November 14, 1983The Spirited Matriarch from PlainsLillian Carter: 1898-1983
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- To her son, who grew up to be President, she bequeathed a toothy
- grin, piercing blue eyes and, as she put it, a "feeling for the
- underdog." To the rest of the nation, Lillian Carter--"Miss
- Lillian," as she was universally known--passed on a refreshing
- does of down-home sass and straightforward irreverence. "There
- was really nothing outstanding about Jimmy as a boy," she once
- said of her successful firstborn, contending that Daughter
- Gloria, two years younger, was actually the smartest of her
- brood. And in 1976 she admonished her candidate-son Jimmy to
- "quit that stuff about never telling a lie." Lillian Carter,
- who died of cancer last week at 85, was never inhibited by her
- role as First Mother. That strength and independence made her
- one of the nation's best-loved matriarchs.
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- If Rose Kennedy produced a clan in which duty and leadership
- were expected, Miss Lillian expected only, but urgently, that
- her children be themselves. It had been her way. The fourth
- of nine children, Bessie Lillian Gordy was born in the southwest
- Georgia town of Richland, where her postmaster father taught her
- racial tolerance early on. When the family moved to Plains,
- Lillian became a nurse, and shocked some neighbors by treating
- poor blacks as well as whites. She was, she acknowledged,
- probably "the most liberal woman in the county, maybe the
- state." In 1923 she married James Earl Carter, owner of a local
- farm-supply store, and set about raising four children.
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- When her husband died in 1953, not long after being elected to
- the Georgia legislature, she was asked to succeed him. Too
- depressed, she said no and later regretted it. But she forged
- a mid-life revival, working as a fraternity housemother and the
- manager of a nursing home. Then, at 68, she took literally the
- claim of a TV ad that "age is no barrier" and joined the Peace
- Corps. Her two years in India, tending to people afflicted with
- everything from tuberculosis to leprosy, "meant more to me than
- any other one thing in my life," she said.
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- Miss Lillian contributed to Jimmy Carter's 1976 presidential
- campaign, mainly by staying home in Plains and taking care of
- Granddaughter Amy, whom she called "my heart." But she also
- found time for speeches and TV interviews, charming the public
- with her ingenuous candor. That outspokenness continued after
- Carter's election, though her off-the-cuff comments sometimes
- could be embarrassing to the increasingly beleaguered President.
- During the Iranian hostage crisis, she blurted that she would
- like to have the Ayatollah Khomeini assassinated.
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- Miss Lillian, whose fancies included baseball, TV soap operas
- and a nightly tot of bourbon, had no regrets when her son was
- defeated by Ronald Reagan in 1980. "I never did like the White
- House," she asserted. "It was boring." According to those
- close to her, Miss Lillian's spirits remained high even after
- a 1981 mastectomy failed to halt the spread of cancer. But in
- September, after the death of her daughter Evangelist Ruth
- Carter Stapleton, "She sort of gave up," said a friend. Miss
- Lillian's unpretentious graveside service in Plains -- attended
- by some 300 mourners including such former Carter Administration
- figures as Hamilton Jordan, Bert Lance and Atlanta Mayor Andrew
- Young -- lasted less than four minutes. "Well, that's what she
- wanted, short and simple," commented a neighbor leaving the
- cemetery. "Yep," said another "And she usually got her way."
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