After active 
          involvement in Bingham High School student leadership and extracurricular 
          activities, Ivy began her public political career in 1932 as a delegate 
          to the GOP state convention. Following her marriage in 1935 to Roy F. 
          Priest, a wholesale furniture salesman, she remained active in politics. 
          Even the birth of three children did not deter her. Beginning in 1944 
          she served for several years as Utah's Republican National Committeewoman 
          and in 1950 ran unsuccessfully against incumbent Congresswoman Reva 
          Beck Bosone. During Eisenhower's campaign for president Priest took 
          charge of the women's division of the Republican National Committee 
          and was credited with the successful drive to get out the women's vote, 
          which totaled 52 percent of Eisenhower's victory margin. 
                    Following her 
                      influential work in his campaign, Eisenhower personally called Priest 
                      and asked her to take over as treasurer of the United States, succeeding 
                      Truman appointee Georgia Neese Clark, the first woman to hold the post. 
                      Naturally, she accepted, but in a Deseret News interview she remarked 
                      how "overwhelmed" she felt by her appointment and commented "I can't 
                      get over the idea of seeing my signature on every United States bill."