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Gerald Ford

Personal Profile

Gerald Ford
  • Birth Name:
    Leslie Lynch King, Jr.
  • Date of Birth:
    July 14, 1917
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Cancer
  • Place of Birth:
    Omaha, Nebraska
  • Place of Death:
    Rancho Mirage, California
  • Date of Death:
    December 26, 2002
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Education:

    University of Michigan

    Yale Law School

Family

Gerald Ford
  • Father:
    Leslie Lynch King
  • Mother:
    Elizabeth Speer
  • Spouse:
    Elizabeth "Betty" Bloomer Ford
  • Son:
    Michael Gerald Ford
    John Gardner Ford
    Steven Meigs Ford
  • Daughter:
    Susan Elizabeth Ford

Career

Gerald Ford

Trivia

Gerald Ford
  • He was renamed after his adoptive father, Gerald Rudolph Ford, Sr.
  • Except in formal signature, he signs his name Jerry Ford.
  • Gerald Ford had two attempts on his life in California during the month of September, 1975. Both attempts were by women.
  • Ford was once a male model.
  • He became Vice President and President without being elected to either office.
  • Ford had another swimming pool dug after he became president because Richard Nixon had had it filled in.
  • Ford was on the University of Michigan football team from 1931 to 1934. He was offered tryouts by both the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears.
  • In 1977 he had a hole-in-one at the Memphis Classic.
  • He is right-handed, but he writes with his left hand.
  • Ford was the only president to serve without being chosen in the national election.

Quotes

Gerald Ford
  • “Things are more like today than they have ever been before.”
  • “As I rejected amnesty, so I reject revenge. I ask all Americans who ever asked for goodness and mercy in their lives, who ever sought forgiveness for their trespasses, to join in rehabilitating all the casualties of the tragic conflict of the past.”
  • “I cannot imagine any other country in the world where the opposition would seek, and the chief executive would allow, the dissemination of his most private and personal conversations with his staff, which, to be honest, do not exactly confer sainthood on anyone concerned.”
  • “My commitment to the security and future of Israel is based upon basic morality as well as enlightened self-interest. Our role in supporting Israel honors our own heritage.”
  • “Even though this is late in an election year, there is no way we can go forward except together and no way anybody can win except by serving the people's urgent needs. We cannot stand still or slip backwards. We must go forward now together.”
  • “I watch a lot of baseball on the radio.”
  • “Our inflation, our public enemy number one, will, unless whipped, destroy our country, our homes, our liberties, our property and finally our national pride as surely as will an well-armed wartime enemy.”
  • “I love sports. Whenever I can, I always watch the Detroit Tigers on the radio. ”
  • “A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government big enough to take from you everything you have.”
  • “That is what has made America last these past 200 centuries.”
View all Quotes: Gerald Ford

Biography

Gerald Ford
Last Updated: Saturday, October 10, 2009

Gerald FordWhen Gerald R. Ford took the oath of office on August 9, 1974, he declared, "I assume the Presidency under extraordinary circumstances.... This is an hour of history that troubles our minds and hurts our hearts." It was indeed an unprecedented time. He had been the first Vice President chosen under the terms of the Twenty-fifth Amendment and, in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal, was succeeding the first President ever to resign.

Ford was confronted with almost insuperable tasks. There were the challenges of mastering inflation, reviving a depressed economy, solving chronic energy shortages, and trying to ensure world peace. The President acted to curb the trend toward Government intervention and spending as a means of solving the problems of American society and the economy. In the long run, he believed, this shift would bring a better life for all Americans.

Ford's reputation for integrity and openness had made him popular during his 25 years in Congress. From 1965 to 1973, he was House Minority Leader. Born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1913, he grew up in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He starred on the University of Michigan football team, then went to Yale, where he served as assistant coach while earning his law degree.

Gerald FordDuring World War II he attained the rank of lieutenant commander in the Navy. After the war he returned to Grand Rapids, where he began the practice of law, and entered Republican politics. A few weeks before his election to Congress in 1948, he married Elizabeth Bloomer. They have four children: Michael, John, Steven, and Susan.

As President, Ford tried to calm earlier controversies by granting former President Nixon a full pardon. His nominee for Vice President, former Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York, was the second person to fill that office by appointment. Gradually, Ford selected a cabinet of his own.

Gerald FordFord established his policies during his first year in office, despite opposition from a heavily Democratic Congress. His first goal was to curb inflation. Then, when recession became the Nation's most serious domestic problem, he shifted to measures aimed at stimulating the economy. But, still fearing inflation, Ford vetoed a number of non-military appropriations bills that would have further increased the already heavy budgetary deficit. During his first 14 months as President he vetoed 39 measures. His vetoes were usually sustained.

Ford continued as he had in his Congressional days to view himself as "a moderate in domestic affairs, a conservative in fiscal affairs, and a dyed-in-the-wool internationalist in foreign affairs." A major goal was to help business operate more freely by reducing taxes upon it and easing the controls exercised by regulatory agencies. "We...declared our independence 200 years ago, and we are not about to lose it now to paper shufflers and computers," he said.

In foreign affairs Ford acted vigorously to maintain U. S. power and prestige after the collapse of Cambodia and South Viet Nam. Preventing a new war in the Middle East remained a major objective; by providing aid to both Israel and Egypt, the Ford Administration helped persuade the two countries to accept an interim truce agreement. Detente with the Soviet Union continued. President Ford and Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev set new limitations upon nuclear weapons.

President Ford won the Republican nomination for the Presidency in 1976, but lost the election to his Democratic opponent, former Governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia. On Inauguration Day, President Carter began his speech: "For myself and for our Nation, I want to thank my predecessor for all he has done to heal our land." A grateful people concurred.

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