Now Vance finds himself in the national spotlight again as former President Donald Trump’s vice president pick. This is a far cry from his humble beginnings growing up in Middletown. His father left home when JD was a young boy and his mother struggled with drug addiction his entire life.
Vance credits his “mamaw” for raising him and being his role model.
He called her “a tough woman, very disciplined and very firm” and the reason he graduated from Middletown High School in 2003, served in the U.S. Marines during the Iraq War, graduated from Ohio State University, received his law degree from Yale Law School, wrote a best-selling book, “Hillbilly Elegy,” co-founded Narya, a venture capital firm in Cincinnati, and now is one of the 100 U.S. senators.
“Her discipline kept me on a pretty good path myself,” Vance said. “Some kids from a troubled family don’t have a guiding hand. She was a saving grace and kept me from the other chaos.”
Without that guidance, Vance doesn’t know where he would be today. Maybe a high school dropout. Or possibly a man with a criminal record. He wouldn’t be one of Ohio’s two state senators. That’s for certain, he said.
There were years, he said, when some of the neighborhood kids didn’t have new school clothes, so his mamaw made sacrifices to purchase them back-to-back items.
“I was very much influenced by her sense of empathy and love for people around me,” he said.
Her “world views” also shaped Vance as an adult and will guide some of his decisions in Washington. He said his mamaw was “a blue collar Democrat” who believed people deserve good jobs, who believed people deserved prosperity, but expected them to work.
‘There is a lot of work to be done’
Vance, 39, never figured to enter politics until several years ago when he moved back to Ohio, and then Portman announced he was retiring. By this time, Vance was an accomplished author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” which Director Ron Howard turned into a movie with many scenes shot in and around Middletown.
“A lot of things were going right for me,” he said.
So he decided to run for senate. He called running a campaign “a job interview” and said he had some ideals that voters would either accept or reject.
“Now the hard part starts,” he said.
That’s because Vance, a Republican, like others from his party in Washington, face an uphill battle with a Democratic president and divided congress, with Republicans having the majority in the House and the minority in the Senate.
He said politicians need to address the “terrible” energy crisis that’s raising prices across the board and the open southern borders that are allowing illegal weapons and drugs to enter the country.
Democrats, he said, are blind to those issues.
“They don’t see any reason to work with us,” Vance said.
So Vance, who has opened local offices in Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo with more scheduled in the future, hopes to find particular issues and rely on his principles and priorities to “get something done,” he said. People don’t want those working in Washington to “sit on their hands and yell at each other,” he said.
He called being elected “an incredible honor” that also comes with a responsibility.
“There is a lot of work to be done,” he said.
Regardless of what happens in Washington, Vance tries to stay grounded by helping his wife, Usha, raise their three young children, Ewan, 5, Vivek, 2 and Mirabel, 1.
For him, “a good day” is having no one sick in the family, eating breakfast with them and driving the kindergartner to school, he said.
Rooted in southwest Ohio
Vance was born in Middletown in 1984 as James Donald Bowman, the son of Donald Bowman and Bev Vance. After his parents divorced, he was adopted by his mother’s third husband.
Throughout his years in Middletown, Vance went by James Hamel, his stepfather’s surname, until changing to Vance in honor of his grandparents.
At Middletown High School, Vance was elected vice president of the Class of 2003. A picture in the high school yearbook, The Optimist, shows Vance and the other three class officers, all females.
Brenda Lansaw, who has worked in the MHS counselor’s office for more than 25 years, remembers Vance as “a pretty quiet kid” who didn’t seek the spotlight. She met Vance through his good friend, Nate Ellis, Lansaw said.
She never could have predicted so much success for Vance 20 years ago, she said.
“He really has put himself out there,” she said.
Nancy Nix, Butler County’s auditor, certainly likes what she sees in Vance. Nix and her husband, Bob Leshnak, are “big supporters” of Vance, she said. They attended his first fundraiser in 2021.
After reading Vance’s book, Nix became interested in the man behind the words. After meeting him, she realized Vance “was special and his intellect knows no bounds.”
Nix lived in Middletown for 23 years and most of her longtime friends still live there. She called Vance’s journey from Middletown to Washington “a rags to riches story.”
She doesn’t see Washington changing Vance. She expects him to become a spokesman for the Senate and to push his policies — closing the borders, lowering inflation and assisting drug addicts — that align with her priorities.
“He’s the new generation,” Nix said. “He’s exactly what this country needs.”
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