Senator, lawyer, former First Lady. Hillary Diane Rodham was born on  October 26, 1947 in Chicago and raised in Park Ridge, Illinois, a  picturesque suburb located 15 miles northwest of downtown Chicago. 
She  was the eldest daughter of Hugh Rodham, a prosperous fabric store  owner, and Dorothy Emma Howell Rodham. Hillary had two younger brothers,  including Hugh, Jr. (born 1950) and Anthony (born 1954).
Rodham attended Wellesley College; she was active in student politics  and was elected Senior Class president before she graduated in 1969.  She then attended Yale Law School, where she met Bill Clinton.  Graduating with honors in 1973, she also attended one post-graduate year  of study on children and medicine at Yale Child Study Center.
Hillary  worked at various jobs during her summers as a college student. In  1971, she first came to Washington, D.C to work on U.S. Senator Walter  Mondale's subcommittee on migrant workers. In the summer of 1972, she  worked in the western states for the campaign of Democratic presidential  nominee George McGovern.
In the spring of 1974, Rodham became a  member of the presidential impeachment inquiry staff, advising the  Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives during the Watergate  Scandal. After President Richard M. Nixon resigned in August, she  became a faculty member of the University of Arkansas Law School in  Fayetteville, where her Yale Law School classmate and boyfriend Bill  Clinton was teaching as well.
Rodham married Bill Clinton on  October 11, 1975, at their home in Fayetteville. Before he proposed  marriage, Clinton had secretly purchased a small house that she had  remarked that she liked. When he proposed marriage to her and she  accepted, he revealed that they owned the house. Their daughter, Chelsea  Victoria, was born February 27, 1980.
In 1976, she worked on  Jimmy Carter's successful campaign for president while husband Bill was  elected Attorney General. He was elected governor in 1978 at age 32,  lost re-election in 1980, but came back to win in 1982, 1984, 1986 (when  the term of office was expanded from two to four years) and 1990.
Hillary joined the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock and in 1977 was  appointed to part-time chairman of the Legal Services Corporation by  President Carter. As First Lady of Arkansas for a dozen years  (1979-1981, 1983-1992), she chaired the Arkansas Educational Standards  Committee, co-founded the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families  and served on the boards of the Arkansas Children's Hospital, Legal  Services and the Children's Defense Fund. She also served on the boards  of TCBY and Wal-Mart. In 1988 and 1991, The National Law Journal named  her one of the 100 most powerful lawyers in America. During the 1992  presidential campaign, she emerged as a dynamic and valued partner of  her husband, and as president he named her to head the Task Force on  National Health Reform (1993). The controversial commission produced a  complicated plan which never came to the floor of either house. It was  abandoned in September 1994.

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