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is carol mccain still alive

Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?

Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?

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Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?
Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?

 

Carol McCain

Carol Shepp McCain (born 1937) is an American former political aide and event planner who served as the director of the White House Visitors Office from 1981 to 1987, during the Reagan administration. She was the first wife of United States Senator John McCain.

Early life and first marriage

Carol Shepp was born in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania in 1937 to Joseph Shepp (1908-1986), an insurance agent, and Mary Shepp (née Madrazo 1908-2000). She grew up in Lansdowne, outside Philadelphia. She graduated from Lansdowne-Aldan High School in 1955, winning a scholarship award.

Shepp attended Centenary Junior College for Women in Hackettstown, New Jersey, beginning in 1956. She majored in English.

Five feet eight inches (1.73 m) tall, Shepp was a swimsuit and runway model for Jantzen swimwear in Philadelphia. She also worked as a secretary.

Shepp first met John McCain while he was attending the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis from 1954 to 1958, but in 1958 she married one of his midshipman classmates, Alasdair E. Swanson, who had been a football and basketball star there. She and Swanson, who became a Navy pilot, had two sons, Douglas (born 1959) and Andrew (born 1962), and lived in Pensacola, Florida. The Swansons divorced in June 1964, after she sued him for infidelity.

Marriage to John McCain

Marriage and family

Shepp met John McCain again when he was stationed at the Naval Air Basic Training Command at Pensacola in 1964, and after her divorce from Swanson, the two began dating. Her future husband frequently took training flights from Florida up to Philadelphia to see her on weekends.

On July 3, 1965, Shepp and McCain married in Philadelphia. The ceremony was held at the home of the family that owned the well-known Old Original Bookbinder’s seafood restaurant in Philadelphia; one of the Bookbinder family members was a close friend of Shepp from college.

Following the wedding, McCain adopted his wife’s two sons; the couple had daughter Sidney together in September 1966.

Apart during Vietnam War

John McCain was shot down over North Vietnam on October 26, 1967; he was captured and would remain a prisoner of war for five and a half years. During her husband’s captivity, McCain raised their children in Orange Park, Florida, with the assistance of friends and neighbors in the Navy-oriented community.

She sent frequent letters and packages to him, few of which his captors let through. She became active in the POW/MIA movement, while those around her wore POW bracelets with her husband’s name and capture date engraved on them.

While visiting family and friends in the Philadelphia area on Christmas Eve 1969, McCain skidded and crashed into a telephone pole as she was navigating an icy, snowy, isolated portion of Pennsylvania Route 320 near Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania, driving alone. She was thrown from her car into the snow, going into shock; she thought she would never be seen and would die there.

Hours later she was found and taken to Bryn Mawr Hospital. She suffered two smashed legs, a broken pelvis, broken arm, and a ruptured spleen. She spent six months in the hospital and underwent 23 operations over the following two years in order to rebuild her legs with rods and pins, and had extensive physical therapy.

During this time her daughter stayed with her parents in Landsdowne while her sons stayed with friends in Florida. McCain did not tell her husband about the accident in her letters, believing he already had enough to worry about. The U.S. State Department contacted her surgeon the next day with a warning; as the doctor later said:

They told me [the person I had operated on] was Carol McCain, her husband is a prisoner of war in Hanoi, and her father-in-law [is] supreme commander of the Pacific Fleet. They said don’t give any info to anyone, because they were concerned that he would be subjected to more torture.

Businessman and POW advocate Ross Perot paid for McCain’s medical care. She remained grateful to Perot, later remarking: “The military families are in Ross’s heart and in his soul…There are millions of us who are extremely grateful to Ross Perot”.

 

Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?
Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?

 

Years after her husband found out about Perot’s help, he said “we loved him for it”. McCain was interviewed on CBS Evening News in 1970 and said Christmas had no meaning for her without her husband but that she carried on with it for their children.

Amicable relations

The divorce settlement afforded Carol McCain full custody of her three children as well as alimony, child support, college tuition for the children, houses in Virginia and Florida, and lifelong financial support for her continuing medical treatment.

She was sued by her former mother-in-law, Roberta McCain, in 1980 for return of personal property, with the suit settled out of court in 1981. In 1981, McCain said that the divorce “was the hardest thing I’ve ever been through. I lost my husband and my best friend.”

Despite the breakup, McCain remained on good terms with her ex-husband, supporting him in his subsequent political campaigns. She refused to discuss her marriage with an election opponent of her ex-husband in 1982 who was seeking negative information, telling the opponent that “a gentleman never would have called.”
During his 2008 presidential campaign, McCain said of her former husband: “He’s a good guy. We are still good friends. He is the best man for president.”

Is Carol McCain Still Alive Or Dead?

Carol McCain is still alive. The couple divorced in June 1964. Carol Shepp later worked in press relations for the National Soft Drink Association in Washington.

SUBSEQUENT CAREER

Reagan campaign

McCain moved to La Mesa, California, where she lived for several months with the family of top Reagan associate Edwin Meese (Messe’s wife Ursala had known John S. McCain Sr. as a little girl and the families stayed in touch).

Carol became a personal assistant to Nancy Reagan in the fall of 1979, working with her as a press assistant on Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign, and then worked on the 1980 Republican National Convention. Campaign travel was difficult for her due to the effects of her injuries, and her feet often swelled badly, but fellow staffers noted that she always maintained an upbeat disposition.

Following Reagan’s victory, she served as director of the 1981 Reagan inaugural ball; and as the Reagan administration began. She handled scheduling for the First Lady and the Reagan children.

Director of White House Visitors Office

In 1981 she became Director of the White House Visitors Office. There she planned tours and dealt with the pleas of different groups for the limited slots available. She also dealt with demands from Washington officials; including a dispute about tour slots between Nancy Reagan and New York Congressman Thomas Downey.

Regarding the pressures of her job, she said cheerfully, “I’m always in tears, but I love the job. I’m really having a ball.” During the early 1980s recession, she declared that the White House tours were fully booked even when other Washington attractions saw declining attendance; her office processed well over one million visits a year.

She was a well-liked presence on the Washington social scene. Between 1981 and 1986, she greatly expanded the annual White House Easter Egg Roll, adding participatory activities and doubling the size of the crowds attending.

She arranged for celebrities attending White House events to sign eggs, as well as National Football League players, with the result that some 10,000 of the eggs discovered by children were signed. The Washington Post likened her “extravaganza-loving” event style to that of Cecil B. DeMille.

She was involved in planning the president’s Fourth of July party for 3,500 staffers and families as well as autumn barbeques for some congressional delegations.

She also planned the South Lawn State Arrival Ceremonies, as well as a national Christmas celebration and she credited her ability to handle such events to her background as the wife of an officer: “As a Navy wife you have to learn how to give a party on short notice and entertain for 50 or 100.”

 

Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?
Is Carol Mccain Still Alive?

 

Private sector

McCain left the White House Visitors Office position in January 1987 to join Philadelphia-based We the People 200, Inc., which was the organization planning the celebration for the 200th anniversary of the United States Constitution that year.

She was named programming director, part of We the People 200’s senior management team. The bicentennial project was already troubled by lack of corporate financial sponsorship and persistent internal conflicts; the high salaries of McCain and other senior staff came under some criticism, but were defended by the organization’s president as justified based upon age and experience.

By 1990, she was a spokesperson for Washington, Inc., a large event planning company. During 1991, she was a spokesperson for the Desert Storm Homecoming Foundation, which held a $12 million victory celebration and memorial in Washington in June 1991 following the conclusion of the Gulf War and Operation Desert Storm. She later worked in press relations for the National Soft Drink Association in Washington.

In 2003, McCain retired and moved to a bungalow in Virginia Beach. While she has had romantic relationships since her divorce, McCain has not remarried. A friend of the family, who was interviewed by the Washington Post in 2008, recounted McCain’s reasoning why she never remarried: “She had a lot of boyfriends.

She was going out with one fellow who was so terrific. And I said: ‘He’s so in love with you. You’ll have a terrific life together.’ She said, ‘No, I don’t think so.’ She’s never fallen in love with anyone else. [John McCain] was a hard act to follow.”

 

 

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