[Editor’s note: We mourn with the nation the passing of the distinguished journalist, historian, and bestselling author Cokie Roberts. We fondly recall her presence with us in 2016 as we honored her with the NEHGS Lifetime Achievement Award in History and Biography at a memorable NEHGS Family History Benefit Dinner in Boston. On that occasion we presented her with a detailed genealogy, researched by our staff, noting that her family included “valiant women, presidents, and kings.” With her passing today, notables recall her as a “trailblazer” and “pioneering journalist.” To those tributes, we’re proud to add “friend.”
This blog post originally appeared in Vita Brevis on 31 October 2016.]
On October 27, NEHGS hosted a Family History Benefit Dinner featuring Bill Griffeth and Cokie Roberts, both accomplished news commentators and authors. Whereas Bill has written of his experiences with unexpected DNA results concerning his paternal side, Cokie has made a career of highlighting the lives of women in American history.
In honor of her accomplishments, the Society presented her with a Lifetime Achievement Award for History and Biography and a beautifully hand-bound book of her ancestors. As I compiled her robust genealogy, I worked to include the kinds of stories that would interest an author of female biographies.
Cokie credits her southern heritage for making her family aware of just who their people were. The strong oral traditions of the south meant that she grew up with family stories, as did her mother, Lindy Boggs, before her. The family has naturally focused on their unbroken line of public officeholders. In accordance with the times in which they lived, up until Lindy Boggs herself, these officeholders were all men.
Upon receiving the genealogy and hearing more about four of her ancestresses, Cokie told us that letters written by women could be the most interesting sources because those penning the letters never expected them to be preserved. She said that men often wrote knowing their letters may be read by future readers, but that women tended to be more open and free with their thoughts. As one such woman, Abigail Adams, once famously wrote in a letter, “I desire you would Remember the Ladies, and be more generous and favourable to them than your ancestors.”[2] The advice still holds true today.
In our research we should seek out the words of women to understand the full story of a family and its community. Beyond that, we also can make a difference by preserving the words of women going forward. Interview women, encourage women to write, and write down these stories we have learned. Cokie summarized her whole philosophy when she said that history without half of the population is bad history. Let us strive for the best in histories, biographies, and genealogies by telling the stories of the entire population, regardless of gender.
[1] Lindy Boggs with Katherine Hatch, Washington through a Purple Veil: Memoirs of a Southern Woman (New York: Harcourt Brace and Company, 1994).
[2] Letter from Abigail Adams to John Adams, 31 March–5 April 1776 [electronic edition]. Adams Family Papers: An Electronic Archive. Massachusetts Historical Society, http://www.masshist.org/digitaladams/.