Connecticut Post

Sister of George H.W. Bush dies at age 94

- By Robert Marchant — With the Associated Press rmarchant @greenwicht­ime.com

GREENWICH — Nancy Bush Ellis, the sister of President George H.W. Bush who grew up in the family residence on Grove Lane in Greenwich, died Sunday at the age of 94.

Ellis was a registered Democrat who was affiliated with a range of liberal causes in her lifetime, but she was staunchly loyal to the Bush family political dynasty, staunchly Republican. She campaigned for both her brother and her nephew, President George W. Bush.

Ellis died on Sunday at an assisted living facility in Concord, Massachuse­tts, her son Alexander Ellis III told The New York Times. She was hospitaliz­ed on Dec. 30 with a fever and tested positive for the coronaviru­s, he said.

“We are sad to share that President Bush’s beloved sister, Nancy Bush Ellis, has passed away. Our condolence­s and prayers are with the Ellis and Bush f amilies as we remember a remarkable woman who brought joy and light to the world,” the George and Barbara Bush Foundation posted on its website.

Nancy Walker Bush was born on Feb. 4, 1926, in Milton, Mass., a Boston suburb, to Prescott and Dorothy Walker Bush.

She attended Rosemary Hall in Greenwich, where she once performed the role of Alice in “Alice in Wonderland.” Rosemary Hall later became Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingfor­d,

Conn. She graduated Miss Porter’s School in Farmington. Conn., and majored in English at Vassar, from which she graduated in 1946.

That same year, she married Alexander Ellis Jr. in 1946 at St. Paul’s Church in the Glenville section of Greenwich, and the reception followed at the Round Hill Club. Ellis, a businessma­n in the insurance field who was active in state Republican politics in Massachuse­tts, died in 1989. She and her husband were longtime residents of Lincoln, Mass.

Ellis was fiercely proud and loyal to her older brother. She was so incensed about a media narrative portraying Bush as a “wimp,” specifical­ly a syndicated column that claimed he a tendency to “whine,” that she wrote a letter to the Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post in 1984, without his knowledge. “George never cracks; he never whines. He flew strike after strike off the aircraft carrier San Jacinto during World War II,” the future president’s sister wrote. “Go after him on votes you don't like, on his conservati­sm which you think is phony, or real, or whatever, but enough of these mean-spirited, untrue attacks.”

Ellis was a delegate for President Bush at the 1984 and 1988 Republican convention­s.

In 1988, when her brother was Vice President, she told a reporter, “Anyplace you want me to come and

speak on behalf of my brother, I’ll be there,” while she was on her way to speak at a campaign event for Bush.

Ellis said her role and that of the Vice President’s three brothers as was like a “second team.”

“The first team is his five kids,” she said. “We're sort of second tier, but working like dogs.”

President Bush was equally loyal to his sister. She kept a family photograph in her Lincoln

home on which he wrote: “To my sister Nan who has taken a lot of heat for her brother who loves her.”

The president’s sister was active in a range of environmen­tal and cultural organizati­ons, including the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the the Massachuse­tts Audubon Society, and she was a great admirer of Eleanor Roosevelt. She took classes at Radcliffe College in her senior years. Friends and family said she had a keen

wit and sense of humor, often signing her letters — she was a voluminous letter writer — “the Dragon Lady,” according to a 1989 Boston Globe profile. She was a skilled tennis player.

A regular visitor to Greenwich, Ellis went to her mother’s bedside at Greenwich Hospital when she caught pneumonia in 1989.

Ellis is the second to last of the five Bush siblings to have lived in Greenwich; she was predecease­d by

Prescott, George, and William (“Bucky”) Bush. She was the only daughter in the family.

She is survived by three sons Alexander, John and Josiah Ellis; a daughter, Nancy Walker Ellis Black; and nine grandchild­ren; and a brother, Jonathan James Bush.

Memorial arrangemen­ts have not been announced.

 ?? Associated Press / Contribute­d photo ?? George H.W. Bush with his only sister, Nancy, when he was 5 years old in 1929.
Associated Press / Contribute­d photo George H.W. Bush with his only sister, Nancy, when he was 5 years old in 1929.

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