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17 Things You Might Not Know About Tammy Duckworth

1970-01-01 00:00
From serving in the Iraq War to becoming the first U.S. senator to give birth in office, Tammy Duckworth has an impressive history of overcoming adversity with grit and humor.
17 Things You Might Not Know About Tammy Duckworth

Democrat Tammy Duckworth was sworn in as the freshman senator from Illinois on January 3, 2017—and on April 9, 2018, she became the first sitting U.S. senator to give birth. A combat veteran with a Ph.D., she has an impressive history of overcoming adversity with grit and humor. Discover more fascinating facts about her down below.

1. Duckworth had an international childhood.

Ladda Tammy Duckworth was born in Bangkok, Thailand, in 1968. Her father, Franklin Duckworth, was a U.S. Army and Marine vet who had served in World War II. The Vietnam War then brought him to Asia, where he stayed to work with refugees for the United Nations. In Thailand, he met Lamai Sompornpairin, a Thai native of Chinese descent, and they got married. Soon Tammy entered the picture, followed by her brother, Thomas.

“It was a wartime love story,” Duckworth said in 2021 of her parents’ union. “And my dad stayed. That's the fortunate part of my story, is that [for] so many other Amerasian children following the Vietnam War, their fathers left. And It instilled in me a real gratefulness that I was an American from birth, that I knew that my future was assured no matter what.”

Franklin’s work for the UN and various international companies took his family all over Southeast Asia. During the first 16 years of her life, Tammy lived in Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia (then the Khmer Republic), Singapore, and Hawaii. Life was chaotic at times: “I remember my mother taking me as a very little kid to the roof of our home in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, to look at the bombs exploding in the distance,” Duckworth wrote in Politico in 2015. “She didn’t want us to be scared by the booms and the strange flashes of light. It was her way of helping us to understand what was happening.” Duckworth’s family fled Cambodia in April 1975, two weeks before the Khmer Rouge took over the capital.

2. She’s passionate about immigration reform.

By 1982, the Duckworths were living in Singapore, where Tammy attended the Singapore American School. She excelled academically—skipping part of ninth grade and part of 10th grade—and athletically, playing volleyball and medalling in shot put for the varsity track team.

When the company Franklin worked for was sold, he lost his job, and the Duckworth family moved to the United States. But Lamai, a non-citizen, initially could not enter the country. Teenaged Tammy and her younger brother, Tommy, were separated from their mother for more than six months while Lamai navigated the American immigration system.

During her time in the House of Representatives, Duckworth supported comprehensive immigration reform, tying the issue to family values and women’s rights.

3. Duckworth knows what it’s like to need help.

Her family settled in Hawaii in 1984 because it was the only place they could afford to fly. Franklin, then in his 50s, had a difficult time finding work, so according to Tammy, the family did “whatever we had to. We collected cans out of the garbage. We returned shopping carts for ... back then, 10 cents.”

Then, a teenaged Tammy got an after-school job and Lamai took in sewing, which she completed in the family’s studio apartment. During her time at Honolulu’s McKinley High School, Tammy relied on reduced-price school breakfasts and lunches, and her family tried to make it on food stamps. “I remember to this day at the grocery store, we would go and count out the last five brown $1 food stamps—I still remember the color,” she said in 2016.

Her family’s struggles with poverty gave her extra motivation to fight for working families and to support government safety nets and strong public schools. When she encounters Americans who have lost their jobs or who are suffering through a weak economy, Duckworth says, “I understand the challenges they’re facing, because I’ve faced them myself.”

4. She went to college thanks to student loans and grants.

By the time Duckworth was applying to college, her family remained in a financially precarious position. “The summer before I started college, my parents walked everywhere instead of taking the bus,” she told the Democratic National Convention in 2016. “Once a week, they would hand over that saved up bus money, $10, to the university housing office, a deposit so I could move into the dorms in the fall.”

Government-funded Pell grants, waitressing, and student loans helped Duckworth afford to attend from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She graduated in 1989 with a bachelor’s degree in political science.

5. Duckworth wanted to be an ambassador—but fell in love with the Army.

After finishing undergrad, Duckworth moved to Washington, D.C., to pursue a master’s degree in international affairs at George Washington University. She wanted to enter the foreign service in hopes of eventually becoming an ambassador—her dream since she was a child—and the school had among the highest passing rates for the foreign services exams at the time.

While at George Washington University, Duckworth noticed that many of her classmates were active or retired military personnel, and “I just naturally gravitated toward those folks as my friends,” she said [PDF]. These friends encouraged her to try ROTC, and Duckworth joined in 1990.

“I was interested in becoming a Foreign Service officer; I figured I should know the difference between a battalion and a platoon if I were going to represent my country overseas someday. What I didn’t expect was to fall in love with the camaraderie and sense of purpose that the military instills in you,” Duckworth wrote in 2015 for Politico.

6. She met her husband through ROTC.

While in ROTC, Duckworth also fell in love with a fellow cadet named Bryan Bowlsbey. Bowlsbey had spent five years as an enlisted soldier before going back to school at the University of Maryland and beginning the training to become a commissioned officer.

As a graduate student, Duckworth was also older than most of the other cadets in ROTC, who were undergraduates, and she and Bowlsbey hit it off—after a rocky start. She told C-SPAN in 2005, “He made a comment that I felt was derogatory about the role of women in the Army, but he came over and apologized very nicely and then helped me clean my M16.”

7. Duckworth had academic ambitions ...

While working on her master’s degree, Duckworth took a job assisting the curator for Asian history at the Smithsonian Institution, putting together anthropological exhibits on Asia. Intellectually excited by the work, she began considering pursuing a Ph.D. in the field.

Her boss insisted that the best school for scholars focusing on Southeast Asia was Northern Illinois University, so Duckworth went to DeKalb, Illinois, to check out the school. “I went and fell in love,” she told Chicago Magazine in 2012. “I did not know I was a Midwesterner until I got there. I just fell in love with the people.”

After being accepted at the school, Duckworth packed her things and moved to Illinois. Bowlsbey followed, and the two were soon married.

8. … But the Army took precedence.

After receiving her Army Reserves commission in 1992, Duckworth selected helicopter pilot as her first-choice assignment. It was one of very few combat roles available to women at the time. “I was going to get the same rank, the same pay, and I wanted to face the same risks [as male officers],” Duckworth said. In 1993, she suspended her doctoral education to attend flight school at Fort Rucker in Alabama, where she spent a year. As the only woman in her unit, Duckworth knew she couldn’t show any weakness to her male colleagues. She logged more hours in the flight simulator than any other student, she says, and finished in the top three of her flight class of 40—and those top three got to become pilots of Black Hawk helicopters.

Returning to her Army Reserves unit in Illinois in 1994, Duckworth became a platoon leader and was soon named first lieutenant. She was deployed to Egypt for a NATO training mission in 1995, but upon learning her unit was being deactivated, Duckworth switched to the National Guard. Then, from 1996 to 2003, Duckworth worked toward her Ph.D. while holding down various civilian jobs, serving her leadership role in the National Guard, and keeping her flying skills sharp.

Making captain in 1998, Duckworth went on to spend three years as commander of Bravo Company, 106th Aviation of the Illinois Army National Guard, but she was about to transfer to another unit in October 2003 when she learned that the 106th, known as the Mad Dogs, was being called up for duty. Duckworth refused to be left behind, pleading with her battalion commander to be included with those deployed. When the Illinois National Guard decided they needed more soldiers to deploy than initially planned, Duckworth got her wish. She shipped out for Iraq in December 2003.

That meant Duckworth left her academic career behind. Having finished her classes, Duckworth was in the midst of writing the proposal for her dissertation when she deployed to Iraq. She would not finish her political science doctorate.

9. Duckworth lost both her legs and some mobility in her right arm while serving in the Iraq War.

Duckworth was one of only a handful of women to fly Black Hawk helicopters during the Iraq War. “I love controlling this giant, fierce machine,” Duckworth said in 2006. “I strap that bird on my back and I’m in charge of it and we just go, and it’s just power.”

She had been serving in Iraq and Kuwait for nearly a year when the Black Hawk she was co-piloting was attacked by Iraqi insurgents on November 12, 2004. Chief Warrant Officer Dan Milberg was flying the helicopter with Duckworth in the seat beside him when a rocket-propelled grenade exploded beneath the cockpit, directly under Duckworth. She struggled for control of the aircraft, but her feet—and the pedals—were gone. She didn’t realize that both her feet and the pedals were gone. Milberg managed to land the helicopter safely, at which point Duckworth lost consciousness. “I assumed at that point that she had passed,” Milberg told Mother Jones in 2012. “All I saw was her torso, and one leg on the floor. It looked like she was gone from the waist down.”

Milberg and others carried Duckworth away from the burning chopper and soon put her into a medical evacuation helicopter, which flew her to a Baghdad field hospital where surgeons amputated both her legs—the right leg was amputated a few inches below the hip bone and the left leg was amputated just below the knee. They set the bones in her shattered right arm and sealed her cuts. Under heavy sedation, she was then airlifted to the Landstuhl military hospital in Germany, and quickly transferred to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Maryland, where her husband met her, keeping vigil by her bedside until she awoke days later. Ultimately, Duckworth underwent over 20 surgeries and retained only partial mobility in her right arm. She remained at Walter Reed for a year, undergoing surgical procedures and physical therapy.

10. But she still maintained her sense of humor.

When Duckworth first woke up from sedation and saw her husband at her bedside, she didn’t cry. She recalled in 2007, “I said three things when I woke up in Walter Reed. ‘I love you.’ ‘Put me to work,’ and ‘You stink! Go shower!’” Bowlsbey was relieved, according to Duckworth. “That’s when he knew I was still me; we've been fine ever since.”

Duckworth has adopted a joking approach to her injuries, wearing funny t-shirts that say things like, “Lucky for me he’s an ass man.” Her husband isn’t as fond of the shirt as Duckworth is. She told GQ, “[H]e’s thrown it away at least once, and I’ve pulled it back out of the garbage can and worn it.” Another t-shirt reads, “Dude, where’s my leg?”

“I can better honor the struggle that my crew went through to save my life by having a sense of humor about it, and showing that my life is really pretty normal,” Duckworth also told GQ.

She also makes use of her prosthetic legs for tasks other than getting around. During a June 2016 House of Representatives sit-in designed to force a vote on gun control legislation, Duckworth worried security would begin confiscating members’ cell phones, so she hid hers inside her prosthetic leg. She joked to GQ that she sometimes hides Sour Patch Kids candy in there, and she enjoys using her prosthetics to make a fashion statement—she ordered special ones that can accommodate a 2-inch heel.

11. Duckworth celebrates the day she almost died.

Every year on November 12, she tries to get together with the crewmates who saved her life. On the first anniversary of the attack on their helicopter, Milberg called her in the hospital at Walter Reed, saying, “It’s almost 4:30 in Iraq. In five minutes you’re going to be shot down.” They shared a moment of gratitude. The next year, Duckworth had just lost her first congressional campaign, and “Alive Day” (what she refers to the event as) helped pull her out of her disappointment over that loss.

The crew continued to meet every year, except in 2008, when all except Duckworth were deployed. In 2009, Duckworth had begun a job with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, and her former crew flew to Washington, D.C., where she gave them a tour of the Capitol and the White House. During her first “Alive Day” in Congress, in 2013, Duckworth gave a speech on the House floor, thanking the men who saved her life. “You can choose to spend the day of your injury in a dark room feeling sorry for yourself or you can choose to get together with the buddies who saved your life, and I choose the latter,” Duckworth told the Chicago Tribune in 2006.

12. She became interested in politics as she recuperated.

While she was rehabilitating at Walter Reed, Duckworth met a number of politicians who came to visit the patients, and she also struck up a friendship with former senator and Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole, who was in the hospital as a patient. But it was only after her Illinois senator, the Democrat Dick Durbin, invited her and a number of other wounded veterans from Illinois to attend the 2005 State of the Union that she began to consider a political career of her own.

Younger service members who were being treated at Walter Reed had started coming to Duckworth for advice and help navigating pay issues and medical care, and she used her new connection to Senator Durbin to advocate for these soldiers and their families. Her passion and persistence made such an impression that Durbin suggested she run for office. After talking it over with Bowlsbey, Duckworth decided to launch a campaign for Congress. In the 2006 race for Illinois’s 6th district, she won the Democratic primary but lost to Republican Peter Roskam in the general election by less than 5000 votes.

13. Duckworth has worked tirelessly to improve services for veterans.

After losing her first Congressional race, Duckworth became the Director of the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs, serving from 2006 through the beginning of 2009. While running the Illinois VA, she created a mental health hotline for suicidal veterans and instituted the nation’s first mandatory screening for brain injuries for all members of the state National Guard returning from service overseas.

Soon after his inauguration in 2009, President Obama nominated her to become the Assistant Secretary of Public and Intergovernmental Affairs for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), where she worked primarily on public relations and created an online communications office in hopes of using the internet to better reach young veterans.

In 2012, Duckworth was elected to Congress, defeating incumbent Joe Walsh to take the seat in Illinois’s 8th District. In doing so, she became the first Asian American from Illinois to join Congress, as well as the first woman with a disability elected to Congress. During her time in the House, she backed legislation to support veterans and worked to pass the Clay Hunt Act, a bill aimed at reducing deaths by suicide among returning service members. The bill became law in 2015.

14. Opponents have attacked her military service.

During the 2012 Congressional race, Joe Walsh, the Republican incumbent, lashed out at Duckworth, suggesting she wasn’t a “true hero” because she spoke too much about her military service. Asserting that John McCain’s political advisors had to pressure him to talk about his own military service, Walsh—who never served in the military—then attacked Duckworth, saying, “I’m running against a woman who, my God, that’s all she talks about. Our true heroes, it’s the last thing in the world they talk about.”

Walsh’s controversial comments sparked a wave of backlash, and he later issued a statement, claiming: “Of course Tammy Duckworth is a hero. I have called her a hero [hundreds] of times in the past four months.” Some years earlier, Duckworth had told The Washington Post, “I can’t avoid the interest in the fact that I’m an injured female soldier. Understand that I’m going to use this as a platform.”

Duckworth also faced anger in some quarters when she criticized the Iraq War during her 2006 campaign. “I think [invading Iraq] was a bad decision,” she told The Washington Post. “I think we used bad intelligence. I think our priority should have been Afghanistan and capturing Osama bin Laden. Our troops do an incredible job every single day, but our policymakers have not lived up to the sacrifices that our troops make every day.” However, Duckworth reiterated her pride at serving her country in uniform, stating that, despite believing the decision to invade Iraq was an error, “I was proud to go. It was my duty as a soldier to go. And I would go tomorrow.”

15. Opponents have also attacked her heritage.

During her 2016 Senate campaign, the military service in question was not Duckworth’s own but that of her ancestors. During a debate with her opponent, Republican incumbent Mark Kirk, Duckworth proudly asserted, “My family has served this nation in uniform going back to the Revolution.” Kirk retorted, “I’d forgotten that your parents came all the way from Thailand to serve George Washington.” Democrats quickly condemned the remark, with a spokeswoman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee calling it “offensive, wrong, and racist.” Kirk later apologized on Twitter.

While Duckworth’s mother is a Thai native, her father’s family has been in the United States since before it became a country—and at least one such ancestor was a Revolutionary War soldier. Following the line of her paternal grandmother, Duckworth’s fifth great-grandfather, Elijah Anderson, served in the Virginia militia under Captain John Bell during the Revolution. Following her paternal grandfather’s line, Duckworth seems to be related to Aaron Duckworth, who may have served as a private during the Revolutionary War.

Duckworth’s own investment in the U.S. military comes from her father, Franklin, who earned a Purple Heart when he was wounded at Okinawa during his service in World War II. Franklin went on to serve in Korea and Vietnam, passing his military values onto his children once he’d reentered civilian life: Tammy’s younger brother also has a military record, having spent several years in the Coast Guard.

16. Duckworth went on to earn her doctorate and flew planes even after her injuries.

When she was deployed to Iraq in 2004, Duckworth’s doctoral studies fell by the wayside. Recovering from her injuries and helping other veterans became her focus when she returned stateside, but Duckworth told Chicago Magazine in 2012 that one of her “greatest disappointments” was that she “ran out of time; I just didn’t finish [my political science Ph.D.].”

While her new career in government work kept her from returning to her studies, it also shifted her interests. Duckworth started an online doctorate program in human services while she was working as the assistant secretary for the federal VA. She continued to chip away at her doctoral work after being elected to the House of Representatives, and after six years of effort, Duckworth graduated with her Ph.D. in 2015. Her dissertation looked at the use of digitized medical records among doctors in Illinois [PDF].

Perhaps that kind of determination shouldn’t be surprising from a woman who wouldn’t let the amputation of both her legs keep her from serving in the military—or even from flying. While injured veterans are usually discharged, Duckworth petitioned to remain in active duty for the Illinois National Guard—switching to inactive duty when she started doing political work. She finally retired from the military in 2014.

She even got her wings back: In 2010, Duckworth secured her license to fly a fixed-wing airplane. By 2014, she was flying helicopters as a civilian. Small ones, not military copters, but the return still felt triumphant. She told the Daily Herald, “When I got back in a helicopter, it felt like home.”

17. She’s the first U.S. senator to give birth while in office.

In 2018, Duckworth—then 50 years old—became a trailblazer in another important way when she became the first sitting U.S. senator to give birth while in office. Her daughter, Maile Pearl Bowlsbey, was born just three days after the death of Hawaii Senator Daniel Akaka, who was a friend of Duckworth’s and reportedly blessed Maile’s name before passing.

Shortly after Maile’s birth, the Senate voted unanimously to overturn its long-held ban against children entering the chamber floor. Under the new rules, senators are now allowed to bring children under a year old, in order to breastfeed.

For Duckworth, who originally submitted the resolution, it was a proud moment: The day after the rule change became official, she brought her newborn with her to the Senate, and then crossed yet another first off her list when she became the first-ever senator to cast a vote while holding a baby. “It feels great,” Duckworth told reporters as she entered the Capitol with Maile in her arms. “It is about time, huh?”

A version of this article was originally published in 2017 and was updated in 2023.

This article was originally published on www.mentalfloss.com as 17 Things You Might Not Know About Tammy Duckworth.