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Geraldine FerraroFirst woman to run on a major party presidential ticket in
the United States Born: 8/26/1935 Birthplace: Newburgh, NY Died: 3/26/2011
(Boston, MA)
Geraldine Ferraro is the first woman ever to run on a major party
presidential ticket in the United States. A Democrat, she was Walter
Mondale's running mate in 1984 in his losing race with incumbent
Republican President Ronald Reagan and his running mate George Bush.
Geraldine Anne Ferraro was born in Newburgh, near the Hudson River about
an hour north of New York City. She graduated from Marymount College in
1956, and then from the Fordham School of Law in 1960. In the 1970s she
was a lawyer and then an assistant district attorney in Queens County, New
York, before winning a seat in the U.S. Congress from New York's 9th
District in 1978. She was reelected to Congress in 1980 and 1982, and
became known as a tough advocate for liberal positions, a colorful
speaker, and a proud Italian-American. (Her parents, Dominick and
Antonetta Ferraro, were immigrants from Italy.) Her surprise selection by
Mondale in 1984 was a landmark event, but didn't help the Democratic
ticket in the end: the popular vote was about 54,167,000 for Reagan,
37,450,000 for Mondale. (The electoral vote was even worse: 525 for
Reagan, 13 for Mondale, who carried only his home state of Minnesota and
the District of Columbia.) Ferraro later ran unsuccessfully for the U.S.
Senate in 1992 and 1998, was a Fellow of the Institute of Politics at
Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government (1998-92), and co-hosted
the CNN political talk show Crossfire from 1996-97. Geraldine Ferraro was
diagnosed with multiple myeloma (blood cancer) in 1998, and she died in
2011 after a long struggle with the disease. She published a memoir,
Ferraro: My Story, in 1985.
More on Geraldine Ferraro from Infoplease:
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