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  #11  
Old 07-11-2007, 07:29 PM
Ronzo
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Originally Posted by Barb View Post
For those old enough to remember who she is, CNN is reporting that Mrs. Lady Bird Johnson passed today at the age of 94...
She got sick a couple of weeks ago and went home a few days ago. I guess she just wasn't able to recover after falling ill.

From what I understand she was a real blessing to this state.
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  #12  
Old 07-12-2007, 01:50 PM
Ronzo
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Austin Remembers Lady Bird Johnson - photos


Lady Bird's Life in Photos
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  #13  
Old 07-13-2007, 08:55 AM
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More tribute and remmebering...


Lady Bird brought Town Lake dream to life

First Lady spurred almost $4 million of work along Austin's front yard.


By Ben Wear
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Friday, July 13, 2007


Lady Bird Johnson didn't dream up the beautification of Town Lake. She didn't plant the first tree. And pieces of the hike-and-bike trail were nearing construction before Mrs. Johnson hefted a golden shovel at Vista Point along the lake's north bank in late 1971.

But the historical record, and the people who were intimately involved at the time, make it clear that Mrs. Johnson — using her White House fundraising cache, her own money and time and energy, and her reputation as the First Lady of Flora — breathed life into a moribund concept. People had been talking about sprucing up Austin's shoddy front yard for a generation; Mrs. Johnson turned the talk into action.

"It was her. It was her, 150 percent," said Les Gage, a former Austin City Council member who was the chairman of the Committee for a More Beautiful Town Lake. "Mrs. Johnson came along and had the ability to make the vision happen. She was the driving force, in her sweet, charming way."

She was the honorary chairwoman of that committee, which the City Council formed in 1971. But there was nothing honorary about her involvement, Gage says. She was at almost every meeting, Gage said, and "was personally on the (Town Lake) site many, many times during construction."

Mrs. Johnson and that committee, in just a few years after that 1971 kickoff, managed to raise more than $300,000 in private funds and cajole the federal Bureau of Outdoor Reclamation and the City of Austin into ponying up another $3.5 million. That money turned what had been a shoreline virtually denuded of trees into a 10-mile-long green gift — Gage says 3,600 trees, bushes and shrubs were planted — that keeps on giving.

"Town Lake was not the jewel of Austin that it is now," said Roy Butler, who took office as mayor just a few months before Mrs. Johnson's committee was formed. "I think it's probably our finest and best element."
Town Lake's problem, initially, was that it had been only a river, a sometimes low-running stream rife with sandbars and industrial facilities on its banks. In wet periods, however, it could overflow. Gage said that in the mid-1950s federal regulators, concluding that the old-growth trees along its banks only worsened the flooding, ordered most of the trees felled.

The completion of Longhorn Dam in East Austin in 1960 created a constant-level lake, and right away talk began of adorning the newly impressive stretch of water. The council formed a Town Lake Study Committee in 1961. And the late Roberta Crenshaw, chairwoman of the city's parks board in the 1960s when she was Roberta Dickson, conceived of a "lake of lights," including blue-and-green bulbs in the trees, lights on the bridges, and footpaths with gas lamps.

The City Council in 1968, while Mrs. Johnson still had a Washington ZIP code, approved a Town Lake Comprehensive Plan that included trails, more trees and a number of scenic additions. Crenshaw spent her own money to plant 385 flowering peach and redbud trees and build a flagstone walk on the north shore near Congress Avenue. But little else besides planning happened over the next three years because of "lack of creativity, indisposition to spend money, drag in land purchasing and lack of coordination between city departments," Crenshaw said in a 1971 Statesman article.

Enter Lady Bird.

Mrs. Johnson and the committee put out a brochure with a hand-drawn map of Town Lake, showing the projected path of the trail (some of which was already nearing construction in 1971) and soliciting donations for different tree varieties. The city suggested donations for various trees — $20 for a eight-foot redbud, $30 for a crepe myrtle, for example.

There were fundraisers, including a big shindig at the LBJ Ranch in 1973 where a not-yet-hot Willie Nelson and his band played for free and $500 donors got a free private shuttle by air to the ranch from Austin. Mrs. Johnson herself gave $19,000 in the first few months, including proceeds from her "A White House Diary" book. Junior Leaguers were out there along the lake, Gage said, tilling the ground and spreading wildflower seeds.

Federal regulators, perhaps responding to direct calls from the first lady or at least appeals made in her name, suddenly were in a giving mood, and the City of Austin found room in its priorities for a prettier river bank. By the end of the decade, most of what thousands of walkers, joggers and bikers see now along Town Lake, albeit with a generation's less growth, was in place.

Occasionally, that beautiful scenery included a gentle lady from Stonewall.

"She'd call me up sometimes in the years later and say, 'Let's go walk the lake and see how it's doing,' " Gage says.

From now on, however, Gage and the rest of us will have to make do with what she left behind.
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  #14  
Old 07-13-2007, 03:27 PM
Barb Barb is offline
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Thank you, Ron, for all you have posted here...
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  #15  
Old 07-13-2007, 03:44 PM
Ronzo
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There's a concerted grass roots effort to have Town Lake renamed after Mrs. Johnson.

The Austin City Council is supposedly going to discuss it.
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  #16  
Old 07-14-2007, 08:50 PM
Barb Barb is offline
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I watched the funeral today on C-SPAN for Mrs. Lady Bird Johnson...

Having just taken a dose of NyQuil, I was trying my best to keep from nodding off, but thought it was heartwarming.

Her daughters and grands spoke very well...the highlight for me, however, was Bill Moyers relating her work in 1964 following the signing of the Civil Rights Act.

Traveling through the South, trying to calm the angry White population, Mrs. Johnson was booed and threatened, but made an impact.

That was something I did not know about her...
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  #17  
Old 07-26-2007, 08:10 AM
Ronzo
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Council to rename Town Lake ‘Lady Bird Lake’

Wednesday, July 25, 2007, 05:10 PM
From the City of Austin:

For immediate release July 25, 2007 Contact: Rich Bailey, Office of the Mayor (512) 974.2250

Council to name Town Lake in honor of Lady Bird Johnson
The Austin City Council will rename Town Lake to “Lady Bird Lake” in honor of Lady Bird Johnson at its Thursday, July 26, 2007 Council meeting. The renaming is scheduled to occur at approximately 11:00 am in the Council Chambers.

“Lady Bird Johnson exemplified Austin’s most cherished ideals of respect and commitment to both its citizens and environment,” said Mayor Will Wynn. “Her efforts in beautifying Austin helped to make our city the envy of the country, and I can think of no more fitting tribute than the naming of Lady Bird Lake.”

“Lady Bird Johnson tirelessly advocated the preservation of natural beauty unique to Texas,” said Mayor Pro Tem Betty Dunkerley. “It is only fitting to have Austin’s most revered outdoor setting named in her honor.”

“Lady Bird Johnson transformed Town Lake from a garbage-strewn eyesore into Austin’s scenic and recreational centerpiece,” said Council Member Brewster McCracken. “Town Lake, and life in Austin, wouldn’t be the same without her vision.”

“Mrs. Johnson has always been a hero of mine,” said Council Member Lee Leffingwell. “It’s a gem of a lake for a gem of a lady.”

“Town Lake is one of the most visible icons of this great city. I can think of no more fitting way to honor a true Austin, Texas and national icon than to name Town Lake in Lady Bird Johnson’s honor,” said Council Member Mike Martinez.

“Lady Bird Johnson was a role model for many as a public servant and a champion for preserving our scenic roadways and land in Central Texas,” said Council Member Jennifer Kim. “Renaming Town Lake in her name is a fitting tribute as Austin honors her tremendous contributions to Austin’s natural beauty and environment.”

Council Member Sheryl Cole said, “Lady Bird Johnson was a tireless servant in the preservation of beauty and the environment. We honor her contributions with this renaming.”

Lady Bird Johnson was an early supporter of environmental issues and was perhaps best known for her efforts to beautify not only her beloved Hill Country, but also the national interstate highway system. Mrs. Johnson died on July 11, 2007 at the age of 94.

There will be an opportunity for the media to speak with the Mayor and Council Members in the Council Chambers immediately following the vote (approximately 11:30 am). Members of the Johnson family are scheduled to be in attendance.
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  #18  
Old 07-26-2007, 10:47 AM
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COOPER COOPER is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ronzo View Post
She got sick a couple of weeks ago and went home a few days ago. I guess she just wasn't able to recover after falling ill.

From what I understand she was a real blessing to this state.
Many here in Amarillo do not like her at all.
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  #19  
Old 07-26-2007, 01:13 PM
Ronzo
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Lady Bird Lake

By Sarah Coppola | Thursday, July 26, 2007, 10:16 AM


It’s official: Town Lake will be renamed Lady Bird Lake in honor of the former first lady.

Lady Bird Johnson, who died this month, was a key advocate for the hike-and-bike trail that encircles the lake.

Today, the Austin City Council passed a resolution authorizing the name change, after a series of former Austin mayors and Luci Baines Johnson spoke in praise of Mrs. Johnson’s contributions.

“I can’t think of a single city that’s more delightful to live in than Austin and it’s delight was added to immeasurably by Lady Bird Johnson,” former Mayor Bruce Todd said. “Today, with this action, every time we walk around the lake, she’ll be remembered in our hearts and prayers.”
Mayor Will Wynn pledged to continue to improve the trail and help close a gap that still exists on it.

“I hope that with this action, we will redouble our efforts and regain momentum when it comes to the trail that Lady Bird Johnson so beautifully began,” he said.

Mrs. Johnson didn’t dream up the idea for the trail. But plans for it foundered until she stepped in and lent her clout, money and time to the cause.

She served as honorary chairwoman of the Town Lake Beautification Committee, formed in 1971, and also donated proceeds from her memoir to the trail, hosted fundraisers and sought corporate donations.

“When Lady Bird agreed to become our chairperson, she brought immediate nationwide attention to the process. Her reputation for preserving and improving the beauty of our land put Austin in the spotlight from that moment on,” former Mayor Roy Butler said Thursday.

Mrs. Johnson raised more than $300,000 in private funds and convinced the city and federal government to provide another $3.5 million.

That money helped transform the lake’s plain shores into a 10-mile trail graced with trees and plants — the heart of so many of Austin’s recreational and celebratory events.

In the past, other leaders proposed naming the lake in Mrs. Johnson’s honor, but she demurred.

“We have talked about this honor for 36 years. I’m so proud that you’re sitting on the dais and will take the baton across the goal line. This is part of history and this truly is the right honor,” former Mayor Lee Cooke told the City Council today.

Luci Baines Johnson recalled today that when she asked her mother several months ago about former mayors’ request to re-name the lake after her death, “she smiled and gave a modest thumbs up.”

Luci recalled an afternoon that she pushed her wheelchair-bound mother along the trail, as runners screeched to a halt to thank Mrs. Johnson for her contributions.

Luci told the audience today, “As you run the trail with those you love, take your elderly parents there, too. I promise you, you’ll never regret it.”
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