Lou Hoover (born March 29, 1874, Waterloo, Iowa, U.S.—died January 7, 1944, New York, New York) was an American first lady (1929–33), the wife of Herbert Hoover, 31st president of the United States. A philanthropist who was active in wartime relief, she was also the first president’s wife to deliver a speech on radio.
Daughter of Charles Henry, a banker, and Florence Weed Henry, Lou Henry moved to California with her family at age 10, where she developed her athleticism and love of the outdoors. She attended public schools and normal school, but she abandoned her plan to teach and enrolled at Stanford University, where she met Herbert Hoover. By 1898, when Lou became one of the first women in the United States to earn a geology degree, Herbert had gone to work in Australia as an administrative engineer and had been promoted to a junior partnership in a British firm. He cabled his marriage proposal, which she accepted, knowing that his engineering work would take them all over the world. After graduation she worked as a volunteer nurse during the Spanish-American War and became treasurer of the local Red Cross organization.
After their wedding in Monterey, California, on February 10, 1899, the Hoovers sailed immediately for China, where Lou learned Mandarin and collected porcelains. During the Boxer Rebellion (1900) the couple was briefly trapped in Tianjin (Tientsin). After they moved to London in 1902, Lou gave birth to two sons (1903 and 1907) and collaborated with her husband on an award-winning translation of a 16th-century mining text originally written in Latin. During World War I she was active in relief work, first in London and then in Washington, D.C., where Herbert served as head of the United States Food Administration (1917–19) and she became a leader in the Girl Scouts and the National Amateur Athletic Federation.
As first lady, Lou experimented with several changes. Although she refused to give interviews, she delivered formal speeches, including some that were remarkably feminist, on national radio, becoming the first president’s wife to use that medium. She instructed her assistant, Dare McMullin, to compile a list of White House holdings, which became the basis for the subsequent complete catalog. Inspired by a visit to the James Monroe Museum in nearby Virginia, she had some of the Monroe furniture reproduced for the White House, foreshadowing later restoration projects by subsequent first ladies.
In entertaining, she encountered both praise and blame. Although she was seen as an efficient White House manager, the staff objected that she worked them too hard and that her standards were too high. Much more controversial, however, was her decision to invite Jessie De Priest, wife of African American congressman Oscar De Priest, to a reception that the first lady traditionally gave for legislators’ wives each year. Although Lou acted without fanfare, word leaked to the press, and the Mobile Press objected that she had given the nation an “arrogant insult.”
In 1932, with the country in the midst of the Great Depression, Herbert was defeated for reelection by Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Hoovers decided not to hold “open house” on New Year’s Day 1933, thus ending a tradition dating back to the Washingtons.
The Hoovers retired to homes on both coasts—a house in Palo Alto, California, and an apartment in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. It was in the latter home that Lou died suddenly in January 1944. She was buried in West Branch, Iowa, at the site of her husband’s presidential library, a place as understated as was the approach of this reticent, independent woman to the job of first lady.