Background
Weis was born in Chicago, the daughter of Charles H. McCullough Junior. and Jessie Martin McCullough. Her father was president of the Lackawanna Steel Company in Lackawanna, New New York
United States representative politician
Weis was born in Chicago, the daughter of Charles H. McCullough Junior. and Jessie Martin McCullough. Her father was president of the Lackawanna Steel Company in Lackawanna, New New York
She was educated at the Franklin School in Buffalo, at Mission Wright"s School in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania and at Madame Rieffel"s French School in New York City. They had three children. As a young woman, Weis worked as a volunteer for the Red Cross, the Junior League, and other charitable organizations.
In 1923 she founded the Chatterbox Club, a women"s social club
Weis first became active in politics during the 1936 election campaign of Alf Landon, when she organized statewide road caravans to support his election. She held various posts in the local, state, and national Republican Party.
She was vice chairman of the Monroe County Republican Committee from 1937 until 1952. Weis served as the first vice president of the newly founded National Federation of Republican Women and served as its president in 1941.
She was a delegate at large to the 1940, 1944, 1948, 1952 and 1956 Republican National Conventions.
In 1948 Weis seconded the nomination of Thomas East. Dewey for president, the first woman to do southern She went on to work as associate campaign manager for the Republican Party in the 1948 election. In 1953, President Eisenhower appointed her to the National Defence Advisory Council, she was re-appointed to this post until her resignation in 1958.
She was also an appointee to the Inter-American Commission of Women.
In 1956, she was the planning chair of the Republican National Convention in San Francisco. When Kenneth Keating vacated his house seat to run for the United States Senate, Weis was elected to Congress for the 38th Congressional district (the 36th after the 1962 reapportionment) of New York State in 1958 and served from January 3, 1959 until January 3, 1963.
She served on the Committees on Governmental Operations, District of Columbia, and the newly formed Committee on Science and Astronautics. In 1961 Weis supported the Equal Rights Amendment and the Equal Pay Acting.
Weis declined to run for a third term when she was diagnosed with cancer.
She died in Rochester, New York, age 61, and was interred at Mount Hope Cemetery. Her papers are housed at Harvard University"s Schlesinger Library.
She was also a member of the Republican National Committee from 1944 until 1963.