Annette Greenfield Strauss

January 26, 1924–December 14, 1998

by Jane Bock Guzman

Starting as a volunteer fund-raiser for the United Jewish Appeal, Annette Greenfield Strauss went on to raise more than twenty million dollars for various institutions in a career that included her election as the first female and the first Jewish mayor of Dallas, Texas.

Institution: Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Participation, Austin, Texas

In Brief

Annette Strauss earned a master’s degree in sociology from Columbia in 1944 while working as a fashion model. Two years later, she married and moved to Dallas, where she began volunteering and fundraising, generating $20 million for United Jewish Appeal, United Way, and other local and national campaigns. In 1983 she joined the Dallas City Council; she became mayor pro tem in 1984, winning the election for mayor in 1987. As mayor, she created Family Gateway, a homeless shelter that enabled families to stay together and provided childcare for parents while they looked for work. After completing her term in 1991, she served as director and trustee for a number of organizations.

Article

Annette Greenfield Strauss made history in the spring of 1987 when she was elected as the first female and first Jewish mayor of Dallas. By then, she had already served on the city council since 1983 and as mayor pro tem since 1984.

A tireless worker for civic and religious causes, Annette Louise Greenfield Strauss was born in Houston, Texas, on January 26, 1924. Her parents were Edith and J. B. Greenfield, the son of a rabbi. After graduating from Houston public schools, Annette attended Rice University in her hometown for one year before transferring to the University of Texas at Austin. While at college, she was named Outstanding Woman Speaker in the Southwest. She graduated, Phi Beta Kappa, with a bachelor’s degree in sociology in 1944. The following year, she earned a master’s degree in sociology and psychology at Columbia University, while working as a fashion model for the John Robert Powers agency. In 1946, she married Theodore H. Strauss. Three months later, the newlyweds moved to Dallas. The couple would go on to have two daughters.

Unable to get a paying job, Strauss began to volunteer for the United Jewish Appeal Drive. This first effort led to her remarkable career as Dallas’s most effective fund-raiser. She raised over $20 million as the leader of many citywide campaigns and projects. At the University of Texas Health Science Center, she established a chair in geriatrics. She also raised funds for the women’s division of the United Jewish Appeal, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, the women’s division of the United Way and the Dallas County Heart Fund Campaign.

Her honors included an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Southern Methodist University, an honorary doctorate of public service from the University of North Texas, the National Council of Jewish Women’s Hannah Solomon Award for Outstanding Volunteer Service, the National Mother’s Day Committee “Mother of the Year” Award, the Dallas Council of World Affairs Neil Mallon Award for Distinguished Civic Service, the Jewish National Fund’s “Person of Valor” Award, Town and Country magazine’s Honor Role of Volunteer Women in the United States and the John F. Kennedy Commitment to Excellence Award. In addition, an annual humanitarian award is named in her honor.

After completing her term as mayor in 1991, Strauss served as an ambassador at large for the city of Dallas. She was chair of the board of the John G. Tower Center for Political Studies at Southern Methodist University and of the Dallas Council of World Affairs. She also served on the development boards of the University of Texas and the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture. She was a director or trustee for numerous other organizations.

Strauss’s Judaism was the springboard to her career. While she began as a volunteer for Jewish causes, she then reached out to help all people.

Annette Greenfield Strauss, whom many in Dallas called an “anchor of love” and “a guardian angel,” died of cancer on December 14, 1998. An entire city mourned her passing. In 2000, The University of Texas at Austin established the Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Participation in her memory.

Bibliography

Biography Index. Vol. 12 (1984), and Vol. 15 (1988).

Castleberry, Vivian Anderson. Daughters of Dallas: A History of Greater Dallas through the Voices and Deeds of Its Women. Dallas: 1994.

Who’s Who in American Politics. New Providence, NJ: 1993.

Who’s Who of Women in World Politics. New York: 1991.

Who’s Who in Advertising. New Providence, NJ: 1990.

Who’s Who of American Women. New Providence, NJ: 1993.

Who’s Who in the South and Southwest. New Providence, NJ: 1988.

Winegarten, Ruthe, and Cathy Schecter. Deep in the Heart: The Lives and Legends of Texas Jews. Austin: 1990.

“Annette Strauss, 1924–1998.” Editorial in Dallas Business Journal, December 18, 1999.

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How to cite this page

Guzman, Jane Bock. "Annette Greenfield Strauss." Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 20 March 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/strauss-annette-greenfield>.