Jill Biden | |
---|---|
First Lady of the United States | |
Assumed role January 20, 2021 | |
President | Joe Biden |
Preceded by | Melania Trump |
Second Lady of the United States | |
In role January 20, 2009 – January 20, 2017 | |
Vice President | Joe Biden |
Preceded by | Lynne Cheney |
Succeeded by | Karen Pence |
Personal details | |
Born | Jill Tracy Jacobs June 3, 1951 Hammonton, New Jersey, U.S. |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | |
Children |
|
Relatives | Biden family |
Residence | White House |
Education | University of Delaware West Chester University Villanova University |
Signature | |
Website | whitehouse.gov |
Academic background | |
Thesis | Student Retention at the Community College: Meeting Students' Needs (2006) |
Doctoral advisor | Barbara Curry |
Academic work | |
Institutions | Delaware Technical Community College Northern Virginia Community College |
Jill Tracy Jacobs Biden (born June 3, 1951)[1][2] is an American educator serving as the first lady of the United States since 2021 as the wife of President Joe Biden.[3][4] Before becoming first lady, she was the second lady of the United States from 2009 to 2017 when her husband was vice president.[5][6]
Biden has a bachelor's degree in English and a doctoral degree in education from the University of Delaware, as well as master's degrees in education and English from West Chester University and Villanova University. She taught English and reading in high schools for thirteen years and instructed teens with emotional disabilities.[5]
Biden is the founder of the Biden Breast Health Initiative, a non-profit organization. She is also the co-founder of the Book Buddies program and the Biden Foundation and active in Delaware Boots on the Ground. With Michelle Obama, she is the co-founder of Joining Forces.[5] Biden has written a memoir and two books for children and has been socially active in the Beau Biden Foundation.
Jill Tracy Jacobs was born on June 3, 1951, in Hammonton, New Jersey, to Bonny Jean Godfrey Jacobs and Donald Carl Jacobs. The oldest of five daughters, Jacobs grew up in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, just outside of Philadelphia.[7]
Jacobs graduated from Upper Moreland High School in 1969, then graduated from the University of Delaware with a bachelor's degree in English in 1975.[7]
In 1976, Jacobs began teaching English at St. Mark’s High School in Wilmington, Delaware. She then became a reading specialist at Claymont High School. At that time, she was also pursuing a Master of Education with a specialty in reading from West Chester University. Jacobs completed her first master's degree in 1981.[7]
Biden taught English at Rockford Center psychiatric hospital while also earning a Master of Arts in English from Villanova University. In 1993, she started teaching at Delaware Technical Community College. During that same year, Biden's began advocating for cancer and education.[7]
After four of her friends were diagnosed with breast cancer, she launched the Biden Breast Health Initiative to educate high school girls about the importance of early detection of breast cancer and prevention efforts.
In 2007, she received a Doctor of Education from the University of Delaware. In 2009, when her husband became vice president, the Biden family moved to Washington D.C., where Biden began teaching at Northern Virginia Community College.
In 1975, she met then Delaware Senator Joe Biden. They married at the United Nations in New York City on June 17, 1977, and she became the stepmother of his two sons, Beau and Hunter. Their daughter, Ashley Biden was born in June 1981.[7]
In August 2008, Illinois Senator Barack Obama announced that Biden would be his running mate for vice president.[8]
Biden was officially nominated for vice president in August 2008 at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado. In November 2008, her husband was elected the 47th vice president of the United States.
Biden became the second lady of the United States when her husband inaugurated as the 47th vice president on January 20, 2009.[3][9] As second lady, Biden focused on advocating for community colleges, military families, and the education of women and girls around the world.
Biden has been a longtime advocate for military families. In April 2011, she launched Joining Forces with First Lady Michelle Obama, a White House initiative to support service members, veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors.[7] During her term as second lady, she traveled to nearly forty countries, visiting military bases, hospitals, and refugee camps, and advocating for education for women and girls.
After her husband's term ended as vice president, they both founded and launched the Biden Foundation in February 2017. The foundation focused on preventing violence against women, his moonshot initiative, and her interests in community colleges and military families.[10][11]
Biden continued to teach full-time at Northern Virginia Community College after her husband left office,[12] with a salary of up to $100,000.[13]
On April 25, 2019, her husband announced his candidacy for president for the 2020 presidential election.[14][15] During the 2020 election, Biden was heavily involved in her husband's presidential campaign throughout 2019 and 2020. She appeared in multiple states campaigning with her husband and giving speeches to their supporters.
Biden delivered a speech on the second night of the convention from the classroom at Brandywine High School in Wilmington, Delaware, where she had taught English from 1991 through 1993.
Biden's speech was focused on both family and education. She talked about the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and how it had impacted education, families and the economy. Biden also spoke about the personal death that her husband had experienced such as the deaths of his first wife, Neilia Hunter Biden, and first born and infant daughter Naomi Christina Biden, who both died in a car crash in 1972, and the death of his son Beau Biden, who died from brain cancer in May 2015.
On November 7, 2020, her husband was the elected the 46th president of the United States.[16][17]
Biden became the first lady of the United States when her husband inaugurated as the 46th president on January 20, 2021.[3][18] At the age of 69, Biden is the oldest woman to serve the role, and is also the first Italian American first lady.[19] Biden is the first woman since Barbara Bush to hold both titles as second and first lady, and is also the first woman since Pat Nixon to serve both titles non-consecutively.
As first lady, Biden has advocated for two White House initiatives, Joining Forces and the Cancer Moonshot and also urging adults and children to protect themselves and their communities by getting vaccinated against COVID-19.
During her first two years of her husband's presidency, Biden traveled to over 40 states and territories, over 100 cities, and ten other countries. Biden also continued teaching English and writing at Northern Virginia Community College, where she has been a professor since 2009. She is the first presidential wife to maintain an independent career and paying job outside of the White House during her husband's presidency.
During visits to Joint Base Lewis–McChord and Naval Air Station Whidbey Island in 2021, Biden visited 16 military installations and worked with Joining Forces to hold over 20 events for military families focusing on employment, entrepreneurship and other issues.[20]
In the same year, the Office of the First Lady joined the U.S. National Security Council in launching the Joining Forces Interagency Policy Committee to secure proposals across the federal government to support military families.[21][22] Biden was put in charge of the American Families Plan, a public legislation that would provide free tuition to students attending community colleges.[23]
In October 2021, Biden was placed as the seventh most popular first lady out of twelve recent first ladies from an online survey poll by Zogby Analytics.[24]
In September 2020, Biden wore Stuart Weitzman's black boots with the word "vote" written on them.[25] The boots she wore was sold out immediately and page views for the boots spiked five-fold the next day.[25] At her husband's victory speech in Wilmington, Biden wore an Oscar de la Renta dark-blue floral dress designed by Fernando Garcia and Laura Kim.[26] The dress she wore sold out quickly.[26]
((cite web))
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Jill Tracy Jacobs Biden was born on June 3, 1951, in Hammonton, New Jersey, to Bonny Jean Godfrey Jacobs and Donald Carl Jacobs. ...
independent
was used but no text was provided for refs named (see the help page).
| |||||||||||||||||
Early career |
| ||||||||||||||||
Presidency |
| ||||||||||||||||
Elections |
| ||||||||||||||||
Family |
| ||||||||||||||||
Writings |
| ||||||||||||||||
Speeches |
| ||||||||||||||||
Media depictions |
| ||||||||||||||||
Related |
| ||||||||||||||||