
Geraldine Ferraro was the first woman nominated by a major political power as
its candidate for Vice President of the United States.
A teacher and then attorney, Ferraro worked in the Queens, New York District
Attorney's office, where she started the Special Victims Bureau. Ferraro ran
successfully for Congress from New York City's 9th District in 1978. There, she
was a women's and human rights advocate, working for passage of the Equal Rights
Amendment, sponsoring the Women's Economic Equity Act ending pension
discrimination against women, and seeking greater job training and opportunities
for displaced homemakers.
In 1984, Ferraro was picked to run as Vice President of the United States on the
Democratic Party ticket, with former Vice President Walter Mondale as the
candidate for President. In her acceptance speech, she spoke of the realization
of the American dream: "Tonight, the daughter of an immigrant from Italy has
been chosen to run for vice president in the new land my father came to love..."
The ticket lost, but Ferraro's candidacy forever reshaped the American political
and social landscape.
Additional Resources:Breslin,
Rosemary and Joshua Hammer. Gerry! : a woman making history.New York:
Pinnacle Books, c1984
With Linda Bird Francke. Ferraro, my story. Toronto; New York: Bantam
Books, 1985. NOTES: Includes index.
With Catherine Whitney, contributor. Framing a LIfe: A Family Memoir
Scribner, 1998.
Changing History: Women, Power, and Politics. Moyer Bell Ltd., 2nd ed.,
1998.
Records 1970-1993 for the National Women's Political Caucus. Radcliffe College,
The Arthur & Elizabeth Schlesinger Library of the History of Women in America.
Cambridge, Massachusetts.