PROPS TO LYNNE
Lynne
V. Cheney Bio
Lynne
Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney, has loved history
for as long as she can remember, and she has spent much
of her professional life writing and speaking about the
importance of knowing history and teaching it well.
As
chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities from
1986 to 1992, she published American Memory, a report that
warned about the failure of schools to transmit knowledge
of the past to upcoming generations. "A system of education
that fails to nurture memory of the past denies its students
a great deal," Mrs. Cheney wrote: "the satisfactions of mature
thought, an attachment to abiding concerns, a perspective
on human existence." Currently, as a senior fellow at the
American Enterprise Institute, she particularly emphasizes
the value of knowing our nation's history. "One of the important
lessons we can learn is that freedom isn't inevitable," she
says. "This realization should make the liberty we enjoy all
the more important to us, all the more worth defending."
Mrs.
Cheney announced a new initiative to encourage historical
knowledge in April 2003. She launched the James Madison Book
Award Fund, which presents a yearly award of $10,000 to the
book that best represents excellence in bringing knowledge
and understanding of American history to young people. The
2003 book award winner was First to Fly: How Wilbur & Orville
Wright Invented the Airplane. The 2004 winner will be announced
in July.
Mrs.
Cheney has written articles about history for numerous
publications on topics ranging from woman suffrage in
the West and the way Americans celebrated the country's
centennial. She was a member of the Commission on the
Bicentennial of the Constitution and served on Texas Governor
George W. Bush's education team. She was part of a group
that revised Texas standards for the study of history.
She
is author or co-author of seven books, including Kings
of the Hill (second edition, 1996), a book about figures
from Henry Clay to Sam Rayburn who played powerful roles
in the House of Representatives. She wrote this book
with her husband, who was a Congressman from Wyoming
from 1979 to 1989. Mrs. Cheney's 1995, Telling the Truth
(Simon & Schuster, paperback, 1996), analyzed the effect
of postmodernism on study in the humanities.
Two
of Mrs. Cheney's works are books on American history for
children. The first, America: A Patriotic Primer, released
in May 2002, is an alphabet book for children of all ages
and their families that celebrates the ideas and ideals
that are the foundations of our country. Her second children's
book, A Is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American
Women, published September 16, 2003, tells the story of
women's contributions to American history. Mrs. Cheney's
net proceeds from both best-selling books are being donated
to charity.
Mrs.
Cheney earned her Bachelor of Arts degree with highest
honors from Colorado College, her Master of Arts from
the University of Colorado, and her Ph.D. with a specialization
in 19th century British literature from the University
of Wisconsin. She is the recipient of awards and honorary
degrees from numerous colleges and universities.
Vice
President and Mrs. Cheney were married in 1964. They have
two grown daughters, Mary and Elizabeth, three granddaughters,
and a grandson.
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