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{{Infobox Politician
|image =
|imagesize =
| name= Rose Mary Woods
| occupation=
| office1=Personal Secretary to the President
| term_start1= January 20, 1969
| term_end1= August 9, 1974
| predecessor1= [[Jerri Whittington]]
| successor1= [[Dorothy E. Downton]]
| appointed1=[[Richard Nixon]]
| party=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
| born= December 26, 1917
| died= January 22, 2005
| boards=
| religion=
| spouse=
| children=
| alma_mater =
}}

'''Rose Mary Woods''' ([[December 26]], [[1917]] – [[January 22]], [[2005]]) was [[Richard Nixon]]'s secretary. From 1951 through the [[Watergate scandal]] and until the end of his political career, Woods served as Nixon's secretary. Before [[H.R. Haldeman]] and [[John Ehrlichman]] became the operators of the presidential campaign, Woods was Nixon's gatekeeper.<ref>{{citation|url=http://nytimes.com/2005/12/25/magazine/25woods.html|title=Nixon's Real Enforcer|first=Francis|last=Wilkinson|date=2005-12-25|publisher=[[New York Times]]|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref>
'''Rose Mary Woods''' ([[December 26]], [[1917]] – [[January 22]], [[2005]]) was [[Richard Nixon]]'s secretary. From 1951 through the [[Watergate scandal]] and until the end of his political career, Woods served as Nixon's secretary. Before [[H.R. Haldeman]] and [[John Ehrlichman]] became the operators of the presidential campaign, Woods was Nixon's gatekeeper.<ref>{{citation|url=http://nytimes.com/2005/12/25/magazine/25woods.html|title=Nixon's Real Enforcer|first=Francis|last=Wilkinson|date=2005-12-25|publisher=[[New York Times]]|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref>


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[[Category:Watergate figures]]
[[Category:Watergate figures]]
[[Category:Secretaries]]
[[Category:Secretaries]]
[[Category:Personal Secretaries to the President of The United States of America]]
[[Category:People from Mahoning County, Ohio]]
[[Category:People from Mahoning County, Ohio]]



Revision as of 23:21, 4 May 2009

Rose Mary Woods
Personal Secretary to the President
In office
January 20, 1969 – August 9, 1974
Appointed byRichard Nixon
Preceded byJerri Whittington
Succeeded byDorothy E. Downton
Personal details
Political partyRepublican

Rose Mary Woods (December 26, 1917January 22, 2005) was Richard Nixon's secretary. From 1951 through the Watergate scandal and until the end of his political career, Woods served as Nixon's secretary. Before H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman became the operators of the presidential campaign, Woods was Nixon's gatekeeper.[1]

Personal life

Rose Mary Woods was born in northeastern Ohio in the small pottery town of Sebring on December 26, 1917. This was part of blue-collar America and as most households were, her family was strongly Democratic. Following graduation from McKinley High School, she went to work for Royal China Inc., the city's largest employer. Woods had been engaged to marry but her fiance died during the war. To escape all the memories of her hometown she moved to Washington, D.C. in 1943, working in a variety of federal offices until she met Nixon while she was a secretary to the Select House Committee on Foreign Aid. Impressed by his neatness and efficiency, she accepted his job offer in 1951. [2]

Woods died on January 22, 2005, at a nursing home in Alliance, Ohio.[2]

File:Rosemary woods.jpg
Rose Mary Woods demonstrating how she may have erased tape recordings[3]

Nixon testimony

Fiercely loyal to Nixon, Woods claimed responsibility in 1974 grand jury testimony for inadvertently erasing up to 5 minutes of the 18 1/2 minute gap in one of the Nixon audio tapes (specifically, the one from June 20, 1972) that were central to the scandal. Her demonstration of how this might have occurred - which depended upon her stretching to simultaneously press controls several feet apart (what the press dubbed the "Rose Mary Stretch") was met with skepticism from those who believed the erasures, from whatever source, to be deliberate. Later investigators identified five to nine separate erasures. The contents of the gap remain a mystery.[4]

References

  1. ^ Wilkinson, Francis (2005-12-25), Nixon's Real Enforcer, New York Times, retrieved 2008-10-08
  2. ^ a b Sullivan, Patricia (2005-01-24), Rose Mary Woods Dies; Loyal Nixon Secretary, Washington Post, retrieved 2008-10-08
  3. ^ The Watergate Files - Battle for the Tapes: July 1973 - November 1973, Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
  4. ^ Shenon, Philip (2005-01-24), Rose Mary Woods, 87, Nixon Loyalist for Decades, Dies, New York Times, retrieved 2008-10-08