Maureen Elizabeth Reagan (January 4, 1941–August
8, 2001) was the only biological child of the former
President Ronald Reagan and his first wife,
Jane Wyman. Another daughter, Christine, was born
prematurely and died the day after her birth. The couple's son,
Michael Edward Reagan, was
adopted.
As a young woman, Reagan acted in films. She married and divorced
John Filippone and
David G. Sills, before marrying her third husband,
Dennis Revell, in 1981.
During her lifetime she was involved with the
Republican Party and worked
as a political activist, radio talk show host, commentator and
health care advocate. She was regarded as the most politically
skilled of Ronald Reagan's four children.
Her most active
political years were in the 1980s, during her father's presidency,
when she was a member of the California World Trade Commission,
chairwoman of the United States delegation to the United Nations' Decade for Women Conference
in Kenya
, in 1985;
co-chairwoman of the Republican National Committee,
and chairwoman of the Republican Women's Political Action
League.
She was the first daughter of a president to run for political
office, but both of her attempts at election to a public office
ended in defeat. She ran unsuccessfully for the
United States Senate from California in
1982, and in 1992 for
California's 36th
congressional district.
Although they maintained a united front, Maureen Reagan differed
from her father on several key issues. Although reared Roman
Catholic (following her mother's
conversion) she was
pro-choice on
abortion. She also believed that
Oliver North should have been
court-martialed.
After her father announced his diagnosis of
Alzheimer's disease in 1994, she became
a member of the
Alzheimer's Association board of directors and served
as the group’s spokeswoman. During her hospitalization for melanoma
cancer, Maureen was only floors away from her father, who had
suffered a severe fall.
She served on the Board of Trustees of her father's alma mater,
Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois from March 2000 until her death.
On May 9, 2000, she was the speaker at the dedication of the Ronald
Reagan Peace Garden on campus. The Reagan Peace Garden recognized
her father's contribution to the end of the Cold War. It had been
raining all day during several other speeches, but when she stepped
to the lectern the sun broke through. She opened her remarks to the
crowd of more than 1,000 by saying, "the sun always shines on
Ronald Reagan."
She died
in Sacramento,
California
, in 2001, aged 60, from melanoma, and was survived by her parents,
stepmother, husband Dennis, and their adopted Ugandan-American daughter, Rita Mirembe
Revell.
References
- http://www.jane-wyman.com/biography.html
- Wead 2003, p. 155.
- Foerstel 1996, p. 77.
External links