Lois Rhame West graduated from Winthrop College in 1943 with a bachelor of science
degree in physical education. A year before she graduated, she married John West who
later became governor of South Carolina. Following her graduation, she taught at the
University of South Carolina to help put her husband through law school.
While Mr. West was serving in WWII, Lois sold war bonds at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in Washington and also conducted farm surveys. After the war she took
a key role in her husband's success as she raised their three children and campaigned
with him. As First Lady of South Carolina, she entertained guests with luncheons,
brunches, and dinner parties while continuing her role as an active mother. Following
their stay in the Governor's Mansion, she lived in Saudi Arabia when her husband was
appointed U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia. A true diplomat, she made some strides
in acceptance of women in leadership roles during her stay.
Her numerous civic contributions include service as a trustee on the S.C. Museum Commission,
president of the West Foundation (a scholarship program named for her husband) and
a volunteer with both the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts. Lois has even started a
horticulture and floriculture program at Midlands Center, a facility in Columbia that
serves adults with mental retardation. For more than 25 years she has taken an active
role in the Muscular Dystrophy Association and was the first female to serve as its
president.
She continues her active involvement in civic agencies and currently serves as co-chair
for Winthrop's first capital campaign. One of the many honors bestowed on Lois was
the Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters Degree from Winthrop College in 1984.