Education
She graduated from Saint Mary"s Academy there and then Hunter College in New York City.
She graduated from Saint Mary"s Academy there and then Hunter College in New York City.
Delegates nominated the Bush-Quayle ticket. Martinez had been a notable supporter of Bush. Martinez was the Louisiana Republican National Committeewoman from 1977 until her death in 1992.
The delegates were greeted by then Democratic Governor Buddy Roemer, who three years later in the spring of 1991 switched to Republican affiliation but ultimately left the Grand Old Party.
Martinez was born in Milford in Worcester County in southern Massachusetts.
During World World War II, she was a lieutenant in the United States Navy Walking Attack Vehicle Enhanced. She later worked to elect Henson Moore, of Baton Rouge and Bob Livingston of New Orleans to the United States House of Representatives. Martinez was the founding president of the Lakefront Republican Women"s Club and held membership in similar organizations in New Orleans and Kenner.
In addition, she was a former vice president of the Louisiana Federation of Republican Women, a political support group founded in 1953. She was the treasurer of the Republican National Conventions which met in Detroit in 1980 and in Dallas in 1984.
From 1984 until her death of cancer at the age of 69 in Southern Baptist Hospital of New Orleans, Martinez served as a director of Saint Jude"s Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
She is interred at the Lake Lawn Mausoleum in New Orleans. Recognition
In 1991, the Louisiana Federation of Republican Women established the "Ginny Martinez Scholarship Award" to honor her work in encouraging young women to enter government service. In 1994, Martinez was among the first nine inductees, along with Mary Evelyn Parker, Lindy Boggs, and Virginia Shehee, into the Louisiana Center for Women and Government Hall of Fame at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux.
As a member of the Radio Network Controller Executive Committee in Washington, District of Columbia, she fought for the Louisiana Superdome as the 1988 convention site. Martinez was a member of both the convention Host Committee, which produced the 80-page program, and the Calendar Committee. She was a member of the Capitol Hill Club in Washington and the City Club in New Orleans.