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Barbara Sears
Barbara Sears
from Wikipedia

Barbara R. Sears (born December 5, 1966) is a Republican politician who formerly represented the 47th District of the Ohio House of Representatives from 2008 to 2016. She served as the Majority Floor Leader in the Ohio House of Representatives. Her district included much of suburban Toledo, Ohio.

Key Information

Life and career

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Sears graduated from the University of Toledo in 1983.[1] [2] She served on the city council of Sylvania, Ohio from 1998 to 2008, serving as president of the council from 2004 to 2008.[1] She is a co-owner of Noble and Sears, Inc.[1][2]

Currently, she lives in Monclova Township, Ohio.[1] She has two sons.[1]

Ohio House of Representatives

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In 2008, Sears was appointed to the Ohio House to succeed Mark Wagoner, who had resigned to serve in the Ohio Senate. She won reelection in 2008 and 2010.[3]

In 2012, Sears won election to a third term, defeating Democrat Jeff Bunck with 60.18% of the vote.[2] Sears came under fire from ultra-conservatives in 2014 for her outspoken support for Medicaid expansion, which many saw as a facet of Obamacare. Regardless, she easily won a primary for her seat to take another term in 2014.[4]

Sears won a final term in 2014 unopposed and served as House Majority Leader for half of the 131st Ohio General Assembly. She resigned prior to the expiration of her term in 2016 to the assistant director of the Governor's Office of Health Transformation for Ohio Governor John Kasich.[5] On December 23, 2016, she was [6] sworn in as Ohio's new Medicaid director.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Barbara Sears (born Barbara Paul; September 6, 1916 – May 19, 2008) was an American former actress and socialite known for her brief film career in the 1940s and her marriage to Winthrop Rockefeller, a prominent member of the Rockefeller family who later became Governor of Arkansas. Born Barbara Paul on September 6, 1916, in Noblestown, Pennsylvania, she pursued acting under the stage name Eva Paul and was often referred to by the nickname Bobo. She appeared in several films in 1945, including credited roles in Code of the Lawless (1945) as Ruth Monroe, That Night with You (1945) as Clarissa, and Bad Men of the Border (1945) as Marie Manning, alongside uncredited appearances in productions such as Nob Hill (1945) and Diamond Horseshoe (1945). Her acting career remained limited to this period without major starring roles or long-term industry impact. Sears was married twice—first to Richard Sears Jr. and then to Winthrop Rockefeller in a 1948 ceremony in Florida. They had one son, Winthrop Paul Rockefeller. The marriage to Rockefeller, one of the wealthiest individuals in America at the time, drew considerable public interest due to his family background and ended in divorce after several years, contributing to her recognition beyond her acting work. She lived much of her later life out of the public eye and died of natural causes on May 19, 2008, in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Early life

Family origins and childhood

Barbara Sears was born Jievute Paulekiute on September 6, 1916, in Noblestown, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Lithuanian immigrants. Her father, Julius Paulekas, worked as a coal miner and railroad worker, while her mother was Jieva (née Ivanavicius). Her parents divorced when she was a child, and she was raised by her mother and stepfather. She spent her later girlhood in the stockyard district of Chicago, an area known for its working-class immigrant communities, before the family relocated to Indiana. This upbringing reflected the modest circumstances and hardships typical of early 20th-century Lithuanian immigrant families in industrial America. Her selection as Miss Lithuania in 1933 marked the beginning of her transition to public life.

Miss Lithuania and early pursuits

At age 17, Jievute Paulekiute was named Miss Lithuania in a beauty pageant sponsored by The Lithuanian Daily News. This recognition occurred in connection with the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, marking her first public attention and emergence from obscurity. She studied briefly at Northwestern University without completing a degree. In 1936, inspired by her World's Fair appearance, she moved to New York intending to pursue a career in stage acting. During these early career attempts, she adopted the stage name Eva Paul.

Professional career

Modeling and stage work

Barbara Sears moved to New York in 1936 intent on pursuing a stage career and supported herself by working as a dress model. She cultivated a distinctive personal style during this period, affecting long cigarette holders and turbans that concealed her slicked-back hair while favoring black dressy frocks. She also worked as a model in Chicago earlier in her career. Under the stage name Eva Paul, Sears secured minor stage roles and performed in a theatrical road company. In 1941, she appeared in a touring production of the play Tobacco Road, which included a stop in Boston. These engagements proved brief and limited in scope. During World War II, while her first husband was abroad, she transitioned to Hollywood.

Film roles

Barbara Sears pursued a brief acting career in Hollywood films during 1944 and 1945. Her work consisted entirely of supporting and bit parts across seven features, with three credited roles and four uncredited appearances, after which she made no further on-screen contributions. In her credited performances, she portrayed Ruth Monroe in Code of the Lawless (1945), Clarissa in That Night with You (1945) starring Franchot Tone, and Marie Manning in Bad Men of the Border (1945). These roles represented her most prominent on-screen work during this short period. Sears also appeared uncredited as a WAC Lieutenant in Sunday Dinner for a Soldier (1944), a Chorine in Diamond Horseshoe (1945), WAC McBride in Keep Your Powder Dry (1945), and Mrs. Devereaux in Nob Hill (1945). Her film activity aligned with her early Hollywood pursuits before shifting focus to personal life.

Marriages

Marriage to Richard Sears

Barbara Sears met Richard Sears Jr., a scion of a prominent Boston mercantile family, at a Christmas Eve singalong in Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood. He gave her the nickname "Bobo," and they married the following year in 1941. After the marriage, she changed her name to Barbara Paul Sears. During World War II, while her husband was away, she appeared in minor Hollywood film roles. After the war, Richard Sears was appointed third secretary at the American embassy in Paris, and the couple lived there, becoming fixtures in the city's social scene. They divorced in 1947.

Marriage to Winthrop Rockefeller

Barbara Sears met Winthrop Rockefeller, the heir to the Standard Oil fortune, at a dinner party in New York in 1946. He soon presented her with a square-cut diamond engagement ring set in platinum valued at $30,000. The couple married on February 14, 1948, in a small ceremony held just after midnight at the Palm Beach estate of sportsman Winston Guest, after the original plan for Friday the 13th was delayed by Florida's then-required 72-hour waiting period. The reception featured notable guests including the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. The wedding was widely publicized as a modern Cinderella story, attracting extensive media coverage that included a feature in Time magazine and a portrait of Barbara by Salvador Dalí. Seven months after the wedding, on September 17, 1948, their son Winthrop Paul Rockefeller was born in New York. The couple separated around 1950. They divorced in 1954.

Motherhood and family

Son Winthrop Paul Rockefeller

Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, known as Win Paul Rockefeller, was the only child of Barbara Sears and Winthrop Rockefeller. Born on September 17, 1948, in New York City, he spent much of his early childhood with his mother following his parents' divorce, initially on his maternal grandparents' farm in Indiana and later in Europe where he attended boarding schools in Switzerland, France, and Great Britain. He earned a degree in ranch management from Texas Christian University in 1974 and moved to Arkansas in the early 1970s, taking over leadership of Winrock Farms, the family ranch established by his father on Petit Jean Mountain. Rockefeller pursued a career in business, philanthropy, and public service before entering politics, including serving 14 years on the Arkansas State Police Commission and chairing the President's Council on Rural America under President George H. W. Bush. He was elected Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas in a 1996 special election, succeeding Mike Huckabee, and won full four-year terms in 1998 and 2002, serving until his death and focusing on economic development and foreign investment promotion for the state. He announced a candidacy for governor in 2005 but withdrew after his diagnosis with myeloproliferative disorder. He died on July 16, 2006, in Little Rock at age 57 from complications of myeloproliferative disorder, a rare blood disease that can lead to leukemia, after two unsuccessful bone marrow transplants. Rockefeller was the father of eight children from two marriages and was survived by his wife Lisenne, his mother Barbara Sears Rockefeller, and other family members. As of his mother's death in 2008, she was survived by eight grandchildren and a great-granddaughter. His tenure as lieutenant governor extended the Rockefeller family's political legacy in Arkansas.

Divorce from Winthrop Rockefeller

Barbara Sears Rockefeller and Winthrop Rockefeller separated in 1950, less than two years after their 1948 marriage. Barbara publicly stated that her husband had "humiliated me before the world," reflecting the rapid breakdown of their relationship. She took their son to live in an Indiana farm community where she had spent her high school years. As the divorce proceedings continued, Barbara arrived unannounced at Winthrop's 15-room apartment in New York and began living there with their son while he was in Arkansas. Winthrop had relocated to Arkansas to take advantage of its more relaxed divorce laws. Barbara vowed to contest any "cheap mail-order divorce" and declared, "I intend to be a Mrs. Rockefeller until the day I die." The legal battle was protracted, acrimonious, and highly publicized.

Settlement details

The divorce settlement between Barbara Sears and Winthrop Rockefeller was finalized in 1954. Barbara received $2 million in cash along with $3.5 million placed in trust funds for herself and their son, for a total value of $5.5 million. This amount was widely regarded as a record-breaking divorce settlement for the era. Barbara had initially sought $10 million in alimony and support payments. Winthrop's opening offer matched the eventual total of $5.5 million. In remarks to Time magazine, Barbara explained her push for additional funds, stating that she needed more because "a man had just tried to repossess her vacuum cleaner." Custody of their son Winthrop Paul Rockefeller was awarded to Barbara.

Later life and death

Residences, lifestyle, and final years

Following her 1954 divorce settlement, Barbara Sears Rockefeller moved into a lavish six-story neoclassical townhouse on the Upper East Side of New York City at 13 East 67th Street, which she purchased in 1955. This residence featured a full-size, wood-lined squash court with an 18-foot ceiling and was described as a brownstone of considerable grandeur. She also owned a flat in Paris and divided her time between New York and Paris for many years. Despite her substantial wealth, Rockefeller was known for relative frugality and careful spending habits that contrasted with her affluent surroundings. When merchants quoted high prices, she would reportedly respond, "Who do you think I am, a Rockefeller?" to negotiate lower costs. She entertained often in private settings but consistently shunned media attention and publicity. In her later years, Rockefeller continued to maintain residences in New York and Paris but spent increasing time in Arkansas. By 1998, she cited the high maintenance costs of her New York townhouse—including staff and elevator inspections—as burdensome and expressed plans to sell it for $12 million in order to spend more time in her Paris flat near the presidential palace and her friends there. She resided in Little Rock, Arkansas during her final years.

Death

Barbara Sears died of natural causes on May 19, 2008, at her home in Little Rock, Arkansas, at the age of 91. She was survived by eight grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. Her son, Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, had predeceased her in 2006.
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