Texarkana Gazette

Wilson Jerman, longtime White House butler, dies

- By Michael Levenson

Wilson Jerman started working in the White House as a cleaner in 1957, under President Dwight D. Eisenhower. But it wasn’t until President John F. Kennedy was in office that he got his first big promotion, to butler, thanks to Kennedy’s wife, Jacqueline Kennedy.

“He had a very close relationsh­ip with Jackie O,” said Jamila Garrett, Jerman’s granddaugh­ter. “She trusted him with her children, and he would ensure they had everything they needed in the White House.”

In 1966, when Jerman’s wife, Gladys, was dying of lupus, President Lyndon B. Johnson flew his personal doctors to help treat her and sent lobsters and filet mignon from the White House kitchen to the family’s home in the Petworth section of Washington.

Jerman, who served 11 presidents as a cleaner, butler and elevator operator, died on Saturday at Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center in Woodbridge, Virginia. He was 91.

The cause was COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, Garrett said.

“Mr. Jerman was a lovely man,” former President George W. Bush and Laura Bush said in a statement. “He was the first person we saw at the White House when we left the residence in the morning, and the last person we saw when we returned at night.”

Wilson Roosevelt Jerman was born on Jan. 21, 1929, in Seaboard, North Carolina, to Theodore Roosevelt Jerman, a farmworker, and Alice Plum. As a child, he had no shoes and walked 6 miles to school, Garrett said. At age 12, he dropped out of school to work on a farm.

Jerman moved to Washington in 1955 and catered parties in Georgetown before being hired at the White House. He was intensely proud of his job, his granddaugh­ter said, and he went to work every day perfectly groomed, with freshly polished shoes and suspenders.

“He never judged, he never complained, ever, because he went through so many tribulatio­ns,” she said. “He was the mechanic. He would fix your roof. Anything you needed — he was that person.”

Presidents of both parties appreciate­d his service and discretion. Jimmy Carter asked Jerman to work for him after he left the White House, Garrett said. He was also close to the Bushes.

Like many longtime White House staff members, Jerman scrupulous­ly guarded the privacy of first families.

“I’d say, ‘I work at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue,’ and 99% of the people don’t know where that is,” he said in an interview published in the “The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House.”

“They’d ask you, ‘What warehouse is that? What building is that?’” he recalled. “I’d say, ‘It’s downtown.’”

Stephen Rochon was in charge of the White House residence from 2007 to 2011, when Jerman worked as an elevator operator for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. He called Jerman “the most gentle-natured person that I knew.”

“He tried not to converse that much with the presidents unless they asked him something,” Rochon said on Wednesday. “His job was to get them up and down to the different floors. But they couldn’t resist because he was so nice. They couldn’t resist engaging with him and conversing with him.”

Jerman worked at the White House from 1957 to 1993, and then again from 2003 to 2012, when he retired under Obama.

He is survived by four children, Joyce Garrett, Angela Davis, Linda Taylor and Christophe­r Jerman, as well as 12 grandchild­ren, Garrett said. A fifth child, Dennis Jerman, died in 2011.

Michelle Obama featured a photo of Jerman, wearing a white bow tie, in the White House elevator with her and her husband, in her memoir, “Becoming.”

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