Malcolm's great-grandfather is A. Ward Ford, an
IBM founder. Malcolm grew up in
Montclair, New Jersey, the daughter of parents who met while working in the sales department at
IBM. After her father died when she was 8 months old, she became the heir to an IBM fortune, which she was to inherit at age 21. Malcolm attended
Montclair Kimberley Academy, graduating in the class of 1965. Upon entering
Hollins College, an all women's school, in 1965 Malcolm says she was "apolitical" and didn't even realize the country was at war. She went to work for the campaign of
Eugene McCarthy in 1968. McCarthy was a Democratic and anti-war senator for the state of Minnesota. After he won the popular vote in the Democratic presidential primary, Malcolm was eager to become more involved in politics. Malcolm cites the
Vietnam War, the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and
the riots that followed, the
assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, and the
counterculture of the 1960s as the factors that led to her political awakening. Though both of her parents and much of her community were
Republican, Malcolm says the turmoil of the time was shocking, and she felt compelled to help make a change. In the summer of 1968 she began volunteering at the Manpower Development Program in Newark. After graduating from
Hollins College in 1969, she worked for
Common Cause in the 1970s. == Political activism ==