GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — Mourners continued to file past the casket of former first lady Betty Ford at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum on Thursday morning, and hundreds of people who admired the forthright Mrs. Ford are expected to gather along the route from the museum to the Episcopal church where she will be memorialized for a final time.
Mrs. Ford will be buried Thursday in the city where she grew up and wed the man who became the only president from Michigan. On Wednesday, hundreds filed past her flower-draped casket during a public viewing at the museum.
Mrs. Ford died Friday at age 93 and will be interred on the museum grounds next to her husband on what would have been his 98th birthday.
Lynne Cheney, wife of former Vice President Dick Cheney, was to speak at the service at Grace Episcopal Church, where the Fords married and where Mr. Ford also was memorialized following his death in 2006. Former first lady Barbara Bush and former President Bill Clinton also were expected to attend.
A smaller service was held Wednesday after Mrs. Ford’s casket arrived at Gerald R. Ford International Airport and was escorted in a procession to the museum. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and other dignitaries attended that service with the Ford family before the public viewing. On Tuesday, a service at St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church in Palm Desert, Calif., was attended by 800 people, including former President George W. Bush and first lady Michelle Obama.
At least 300 mourners paid their respects Wednesday, some carrying flags and others sharing thoughts about the importance of the Fords to Grand Rapids and Michigan. The four-hour viewing followed a similar, and sometimes tearful, send-off by thousands of well-wishers in California earlier in the day.
Edna Jungers, 95, of Stillwater, Okla., and her 78-year-old niece, Yvonne Locker, drove from Ms. Locker’s summer home in Milwaukee to greet the casket as it arrived at the museum. They then joined hundreds of other mourners who slowly walked by Mrs. Ford’s mahogany casket covered in pink and white flowers, with a presidential seal alight overhead and an honor guard standing in attendance.
“It’s wonderful to give her that much honor. She was worthy of it,” Ms. Jungers said.
On the way out, those paying their respects were handed a card with a photo of Mrs. Ford and a note of appreciation from the Ford family. A Ford granddaughter, 30-year-old Tyne Vance, shook hands with those leaving.
“Thank you for coming,” she said to each one.
Wednesday’s crowd wasn’t as large as that when Mr. Ford’s funeral and memorial services were held over two icy winter days four years ago. But Betty Ford, who gave dance lessons in Grand Rapids and worked as a fashion coordinator and clothing buyer at the local Herpolscheimer’s department store before marrying Mr. Ford, was remembered fondly by those who came to pay homage.
“She really reached out to all the people who struggled … with drug and alcohol addiction,” said John Patrick Jr., a 38-year-old Grand Rapids resident who works with dialysis patients and sees the ravages alcoholism can wreak. “She was very gracious.”
Thousands of people have signed condolence books in Grand Rapids for Mrs. Ford since Saturday.
For former Michigan Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land and friends Joni Vander Till and Vicki Avink, the public viewing was a chance to talk about the days when the three young women greeted the Fords on the airport tarmac on their returns to Michigan with hand-lettered signs that read, “Welcome home, Jerry,” and “Welcome home, Betty.”
All three were “Scatterblitzers” during Mr. Ford’s 1976 presidential campaign, young women who traveled around the Midwest and handed out Michigan apples for Mr. Ford. Ms. Land said Mrs. Ford gave them someone else to respect and admire besides the well-regarded president, as she played a large role in caring for her family and boosting her husband’s career — in her own outspoken way.
“She sometimes disagreed with her husband on some of the issues, and so that was kind of a big deal,” Ms. Land recalled. “I think he always appreciated her opinion, even though some days he was a little frustrated.”
In California, the hearse carrying Mrs. Ford’s body drove through Palm Desert, Rancho Mirage and other desert resort cities, people lined the streets and hoisted American flags to say goodbye to the beloved former first lady. Some wiped tears from their eyes.
“The family was overwhelmed with the number of people,” family spokeswoman Barbara Lewandrowski said. “They are so heartfelt and grateful.”
Thousands more turned out for Wednesday’s motorcade, including people who sat along the route in beach chairs. A woman on a golf course stopped her cart and held her hand over her heart, while people nearby shouted, “Thank you, Betty.” Many clapped and stood at attention.
During Tuesday’s service, former first lady Rosalynn Carter and journalist Cokie Roberts, among others, hailed Mrs. Ford as a force of nature whose boundless energy and enthusiasm, coupled with a steadfast determination to do what was right, pushed the country toward a commitment to equal rights for women and other causes.
Mrs. Ford, the accidental first lady, was thrust into the White House when President Richard Nixon resigned on Aug. 9, 1974, and her husband, then vice president, assumed the nation’s highest office. Although she always said she never expected or wanted to be first lady, she quickly embraced the role.
Her candidness, unheard of at the time, helped bring such previously taboo subjects as breast cancer into the public discussion as she openly discussed her own battle with the disease. She was equally outspoken about her struggles with drug and alcohol abuse, and her spearheading of the creation of the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage to treat those diseases has benefited thousands.
“Millions of women are in her debt today, and she was never afraid to speak the truth, even about the most sensitive subjects, including her own struggle with alcohol and pain killers,” Mrs. Carter said. “She got some criticism, but I thought she was wonderful, and her honesty gave to others every single day.”
Other mourners who packed the church Tuesday included former California first lady Maria Shriver and former California Gov. Pete Wilson.
Associated Press writers Jeff Wilson contributed to this report from Palm Springs, Calif., and John Rogers reported from Los Angeles.
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