The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For Bush, Georgia a palce of love legacy

Among ties to state, her work with Morehouse School of Medicine, literacy had profound impact.

- By Jennifer Brett, Jill Vejnoska and Shelia M. Poole jbrett@ajc.com, jvejnoska@ajc.com, spoole@ajc.com

F or much of her life, Barbara Bush had

Georgia on her mind.

Her 73-year marriage began in 1945 with a honeymoon trip to the Cloister at Sea Island; she and George H.W. Bush were back in 1995 for their 50th anniversar­y. Her literacy foundation has partnered with programs across the state, and she was instrument­al in helping Morehouse School of Medicine raise money in its early days. When her husband needed Georgia to ascend from the vice presidency to the Oval Office, she came to Atlanta to make a personal appeal.

“She was a tough lady. Great wit. Very authentic,” said Eric Tanenblatt, who served in the first Bush administra­tion, later became Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue’s

chief of staff and now chairs the U.S. Public Policy practice at the global law firm Dentons. “Whenever I was around her, I felt like I was with someone truly authentic and sincere. She was like everyone’s grandmothe­r.”

He was manning an Atlanta phone bank in 1987 on behalf of George H.W. Bush’s presidenti­al bid when Barbara Bush walked in — and got to work.

“She actually got on the phone,” he recalled. “She started calling people in Georgia to thank them for the i r support. She was actively involved in the campaigns.”

Bush, 92, died Tuesday in Houston after a period of failing health. A public celebratio­n of her life is planned for today at Houston’s City Hall. Her remains will lie in repose from noon to midnight Friday at St. Martin’s Church in Houston, and members of the public may pay respects during those hours. (Details are posted online at barbarapbu­sh.com/ funeral-informatio­n.)

Her funeral service on Saturday is private.

Dr. Louis W. Sullivan of Atlanta, who served as secretary of Health and Human Services from 1989 to 1993, will be there as well. He said the friendship he began with Barbara Bush during her husband’s time as vice president proved vital to Atlanta’s Morehouse School of Medicine. He became president of the medical school in 1981 and retired in 2002, stepping away from the role during his time in the Bush administra­tion.

“I’ve known Mrs. Bush since November 1982, when I accompanie­d then-Vice President Bush on a trip through sub-Saharan Africa,” he said. “This was the first visit to sub-Saharan Africa by a senior member of the Reagan administra­tion.”

While the vice president met with heads of state, Barbara Bush met with leaders of various groups, including leaders of adult literacy programs.

“At the end of this twoweek trip, I convinced Barbara that she and I were in the same business, just different branches,” Sullivan said. “Morehouse School of Medicine was a young institutio­n then. She accepted our invitation and joined our board in January 1983. In six years, she missed only one meeting.”

She helped the institutio­n raise vital support, he added.

“We had luncheons all over the country with mem- bers of the business and philanthro­pic communitie­s,” he said. “She was our draw. That campaign was a success. She played a key role.”

Bush later wrote the fore- word to “The Morehouse Mystique,” Sullivan’s history of the medical school. The institutio­n’s endowed George H.W. and Barbara P. Bush Professor of Neu- roscience position reflects her dedication.

“Barbara Bush was committed to the concept of equal opportunit­y for all Americans,” Sullivan said. “She embodied a quiet but firm and noble dignity. She glorified the importance of public service, to uplift the lives of others.”

In 1989, Bush created the Tallahasse­e, Fla.-based Bar- bara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy, which provided more than $110 mil- lion in grants for literacy programs across the nation, including in schools serving metro Atlanta, Dublin and Savannah. In 2016, the foundation made a $100,000 grant to the “Talk With Me Baby” early childhood literacy program developed at Emory University.

Jackie Curtis is executive director of Communitie­s in Schools of Laurens County, which received a $65,000 grant to start a program for teenage mothers who had dropped out of high school. Bush’s influence cannot be overstated, Curtis said.

“I think history will prove that her impact on literacy was probably more far-reach- ing than her position as first lady and the mother of a president,” she said.

Perhaps Bush’s most pr o minent f i nal public appearance was the 2017 Super Bowl, where more than 70,000 fans filled NRG Stadium in Houston with deafening cheers as she and her husband were conveyed onto the field for the pregame coin toss. Hailing from New York and Massachuse­tts, it’s possible that Barbara and George H.W. Bush are Patriots fans. But Barbara Bush, radiant in a hot pink poncho, exchanged greetings with Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan as part of the festivitie­s.

During a trip to Atlanta last fall to promote their new book, Barbara Pierce Bush and Jenna Bush Hager shared warm and funny memories of their “Ganny.” The twins were 7 when their grandfathe­r became president. Keen to seize the mantle of first granddaugh­ters, they ordered peanut butter-and-jelly sandwiches to be delivered to the White House bowling alley. Ganny put the kibosh on the Eloise act, reminding the young ladies they were in the peo- ple’s house, “not in a hotel.”

Later, during George W. Bush’s administra­tion, their grandmothe­r admonished the leader of the free world when he got too comfy: “I don’t care if you are the president of the United States, take your feet off my coffee table.” Bush 43 complied.

Tanenblatt, the former Bush administra­tion official, chuckled at how the anecdotes underscore­d Barbara Bush’s unassuming bearing.

“She was sincere but she was clearly someone who spoke her mind. There were no airs about her,” he said. “Mrs. Bush’s life, and now her legacy, was an extraordin­ary one, spent in service to her family and her coun- try. The loss of her light and love felt today by her family is shared by all who knew her and by the many whose lives were radically changed by her leadership and work in literacy. I was honored to have known the former first lady for more than 30 years, and I will miss her grace and wit.”

 ?? FRANK NIEMEIR / AJC 1997 ?? Former first lady Barbara Bush (right) meets with third graders from Addison Elementary School and their honor teacher Jan Bernard (left) at Charlie Brown airport in 1997.
FRANK NIEMEIR / AJC 1997 Former first lady Barbara Bush (right) meets with third graders from Addison Elementary School and their honor teacher Jan Bernard (left) at Charlie Brown airport in 1997.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Dr. Louis Sullivan holds his photograph with George H.W. Bush and the late Barbara Bush.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Dr. Louis Sullivan holds his photograph with George H.W. Bush and the late Barbara Bush.
 ?? RICH ADDICKS / AJC 1988 ?? Coretta Scott King and Barbara Bush at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans.
RICH ADDICKS / AJC 1988 Coretta Scott King and Barbara Bush at the Republican National Convention in New Orleans.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY GEORGE H.W. BUSH PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM ?? George H.W. and Barbara Bush were married in Rye, N.Y., then headed south to honeymoon on the Georgia coast.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY GEORGE H.W. BUSH PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM George H.W. and Barbara Bush were married in Rye, N.Y., then headed south to honeymoon on the Georgia coast.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / AJC 2017 ?? Former President George H.W. Bush does the coin toss with former First Lady Barbara Bush looking on when the Atlanta Falcons met the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LI.
CURTIS COMPTON / AJC 2017 Former President George H.W. Bush does the coin toss with former First Lady Barbara Bush looking on when the Atlanta Falcons met the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LI.

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