After graduating in 1961, Gu was assigned to work in China's largest
nickel mine of
Jinchuan, in poverty stricken
Gansu Province of northwest China. She was transferred to
Beijing three years later, to join her husband who was working there. While in Beijing, she worked in the Ministry of Textile Industry. In 1982, Gu was transferred to her home province of Jiangsu to serve as
CCP Committee Secretary (the party chief was then called "first secretary") in charge of economy. The following year, she was elected Governor of Jiangsu by the Provincial People's Congress, making her the first female provincial governor in the history of the People's Republic of China. During her tenure, she focused her efforts on improving agricultural yields in the poorer northern Jiangsu, while encouraged the development of "village and township enterprises" in the south, taking advantage of its proximity to the major industrial center of
Shanghai. The small scale enterprises helped lift peasants out of poverty and were hailed as a model for all of China. She also oversaw the development of large-scale industrial facilities such as
Yizheng Chemical Fibre and Qixiashan Chemical Fertilizer Plant. Gu was Vice Chairwoman of the
All-China Women's Federation from 1998 to 2003, and Chairwoman from 2003 to 2008. She also concurrently served as a Vice Chair of the Standing Committee of the
10th National People's Congress from 2003 to 2008.。 ==Family==