Background
Heitman, Betty Green was born on November 27, 1929 in Malvern, Arkansas, United States. Daughter of George Anderson and Inell (Cooper) Green.
Heitman, Betty Green was born on November 27, 1929 in Malvern, Arkansas, United States. Daughter of George Anderson and Inell (Cooper) Green.
She graduated in 1949 from Texas Woman"s University in Denton in North Texas.
She also prodded United States. Presidents Ronald West. Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush to appoint more women to executive government offices. Heitman was a native of Malvern in Hot Spring County, near Little Rock, Arkansas. In 1980, she was named a distinguished alumnus of the institution.
Heitman was married to Henry Schrader Heitman, Doctor of Medicine (1923–1992), who had been a captain in the United States Army Air Forces during World World War II.The couple had four children, among them, Thomas H. Heitman (born 1956) of Oakton in Fairfax County, Virginia, and Paul Anderson Heitman (born 1961) of Denham Springs in Livingston Parish, Louisiana.
Heitman was a delegate to the 1968 and 1976 Republican national conventions held in Miami Beach, Florida, and Kansas City, Missouri, to nominate Richard M. Nixon and Gerald R. Ford, Junior., respectively. The NFRW established in her honor the biennial Betty Heitman Award for State Excellence.All of the NFRW presidents rose from the ranks of state federations.
From 1996 to 1997, another Louisiana Republican, Marilyn Thayer, served as the NFRW president After her NFRW presidency, Heitman was from 1983 to 1987 the co-chairwoman of the Republican National Committee under chairman Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Junior., during the administration of Ronald Reagan.
Considered a conservative Republican, she was Reagan"s choice for committee co-chairman
At a leadership forum in Philadelphia, she said, " I feel we have not done as good a job as we could to arm our women leaders with as much information as they need at the grassroots level We hope these meetings will help them gear up for the 1984 campaign."
After her party co-chairmanship, Reagan appointed Heitman in 1987 to succeed Kenneth Duberstein on the Commission for the Preservation of America"s Heritage Abroad. She was also designated as the chairman of the commission.
When that effort was abandoned in 1991, Heitman returned to Baton Rouge.
While in Washington, District of Columbia, and residing mostly in Arlington, Virginia, she established her own consulting firm, the Heitman Group, which lobbied on behalf of international marketing interests, among other interests. In 1996, Heitman was inducted posthumously into the Louisiana Center for Women and Government Hall of Fame at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, along with another Baton Rouge political figure, the Democrat former State Representative Lillian West. Walker.
As the president of the National Federation of Republican Women, Heitman worked to establish two schools for training within the organization, one for campaign management and the other for political polling. In 1983, as the party co-chairwoman, Heitman convened meetings of female party activists in a program called "Target "80s" to encourage candidates to seek office in 1984, when Reagan would be running for a second term as president
During the administration of United States. President George Herbert Walker Bush, Heitman was a member of the Committee on Executive Exchange, which sought to enhance relations between business and government with an exchange of executives.
Married Henry Schrader Heitman, April 3, 1951. Children– Donna, Thomas, Perry, Paul.