Sneha Girap (Editor)

Letitia Baldrige

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
None

Role
  
Expert

Name
  
Letitia Baldrige


Religion
  
Roman Catholic

Succeeded by
  
Liz Carpenter

Siblings
  
Malcolm Baldrige, Jr.

Letitia Baldrige Letitia Baldrige Jackie Kennedys social secretary and

Appointed by
  
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy

Born
  
February 9, 1926Miami, Florida, U.S. (
1926-02-09
)

Occupation
  
Public relations executiveEtiquette expert

Died
  
October 29, 2012, Bethesda, Maryland, United States

Spouse
  
Robert Hollensteiner (m. 1963)

Children
  
Clare Hollensteiner, Malcolm Hollensteiner

Parents
  
Howard M. Baldrige, Regina Baldrige

Books
  
Letitia Baldrige's New Man, In the Kennedy style, A lady - first, Legendary Brides, Letitia Balderige's New Com

Remembering letitia baldrige jim durham elliott carter bill dees


Letitia "Tish" Baldrige (February 9, 1926 – October 29, 2012) was an American etiquette expert, public relations executive and author who was most famous for serving as Jacqueline Kennedy's Social Secretary.

Contents

Letitia Baldrige Afflictorcom Letitia Baldrige

Known as the "Doyenne of Decorum", she wrote a newspaper column, ran her own PR firm, and, along with updating Amy Vanderbilt's Complete Book of Etiquette, she published 20 books and appeared on Late Night with David Letterman and the cover of Time magazine.

Letitia Baldrige Letitia Baldrige Kennedy White House social secretary

Letitia baldrige etiquette maven is dead at 86


Early life

Letitia Baldrige KN21252 White House Social Secretary Letitia Baldrige

Letitia Baldrige was born February 9, 1926 in Miami, Florida, and grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, the youngest child of Republican Congressman Howard Malcolm Baldrige and his wife, Regina (née Connell). Her brother was Howard Malcolm Baldrige, Jr., the initial Secretary of Commerce during the Ronald Reagan administration .

Letitia Baldrige httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesI3

Baldrige attended Miss Porter's School in Farmington, CT, where she met Jacqueline Bouvier, the future First Lady. The two also attended Vassar College together, from which Baldrige graduated in 1946 with a bachelor's degree in psychology.

Early years

After first being denied a position and told to improve her secretarial skills, she reapplied and was hired by the State Department as social secretary to David K.E. Bruce, US ambassador to France. After three years she was appointed secretary in Rome to the American ambassador to Italy, Clare Boothe Luce, followed by a position as director of public relations for the jeweller Tiffany & Co.

Although then a registered Republican, in 1960 she was invited to work for the Kennedy campaign in Massachusetts once he secured the Democratic presidential nomination, going on to work officially for the First Lady after his victory. Saying she "had had it" with the long days in Washington and serving the administration on overseas trips, she resigned early in 1963, to return briefly to aid the First Lady after her husband's assassination in November of that year.

After the Kennedy White House

She served on the board of directors of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award. She also did significant charity work with Jane Goodall to help fundraise for the preservation of habitats for wild chimpanzees.

In 1964, the year after marrying real estate developer Robert Hollensteiner, whom she met while working for a Kennedy family firm, she founded her own PR business, Letitia Baldrige Enterprises, Chicago. Earning the nickname the "Doyenne of Decorum" with a newspaper column and a string of successful books, in 1978 she appeared on the November 28th cover of Time Magazine. She had continued working into late life, publishing books in every decade from the 1950s, her final book being, Taste: Acquiring What Money Can't Buy, released in 2007.

Death

Baldrige died of cardiac complications at a nursing facility in Bethesda, Maryland on October 29, 2012. Mary M. Mitchell, a longtime friend and collaborator, confirmed her death. She was survived by her husband, Robert Hollensteiner, and their two children, Clare and Malcolm.

References

Letitia Baldrige Wikipedia