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  1. Jefferson was aware nonetheless that the duties his wife would have assumed, had she lived, needed to be performed. When his two married daughters, Martha "Patsy" Jefferson Randolph and Maria "Polly" Jefferson Eppes, stayed with him at the presidential mansion, they occasionally took on the job of hostessing.

  2. Thomas Jefferson had been a widower for almost two decades by the time he was inaugurated, allowing his daughter Martha “Patsy” Randolph to take on the role of ‘first lady.’ As a child, she accompanied her father Thomas Jefferson to Paris (Jefferson was going to Europe to promote American interests abroad as Minister to France) and resided there from August 1784 to September 1789.

  3. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Died: September 6, 1782, Monticello, Virginia (aged 33) Martha Jefferson (born October 30 [October 19, Old Style], 1748, Charles City county, Virginia [U.S.]—died September 6, 1782, Monticello, Virginia) was the wife of Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United States (1801–09). She was never a first lady because she died 19 years ...

  4. Martha " Patsy " Randolph (de Jefferson; 27 de septiembre de 1772 - 10 de octubre de 1836) era la hija mayor de Thomas Jefferson, el tercer presidente de los Estados Unidos, y su esposa, Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson. Nació en Monticello, cerca de Charlottesville, Virginia.

  5. Martha Jefferson Randolph. Martha Washington Jefferson Randolph (September 27, 1772 – October 10, 1836) was the daughter of Thomas Jefferson and his wife Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson. Thomas Jefferson was the third President of the United States. Because her father was a widower, Martha Washington Jefferson Randolph acted as the First Lady ...

  6. 25 de oct. de 2022 · Martha was married to Thomas Jefferson from 1772 to 1782, when she passed away. After the death of her father, the couple inherited his debt, which also affected Thomas’s finances. The couple welcomed six children in their marriage; however, only two of them lived made it past childhood. Their children were:

  7. Randolph, then the mother of eleven children, was fifty-one years old. Ford must have come to Monticello almost immediately for he painted not one but two portraits — Mrs. Randolph and her eldest daughter, Ann Cary Randolph Bankhead — by the end of the month. Jefferson paid "Jas. W. Ford for 50 D. for 2 portraits" on September 29, 1823.