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  1. Acetate sound recording - Democratic National Committee, Interview with Eleanor Wilson McAdoo, 11 Oct. 1948 A/V No. A0314/D12 LP sound recording - Adlai Stevenson in Conversation with Arnold Michaelis, 19 June 1956

  2. Their son, William Gibbs, died August 30, 2007. Ellen Wilson McAdoo de Onate Hinshaw died December 22, 1946 at age 31 in Santa Monica, CA. Her death was allegedly due to an overdose of prescription medication. At the time of her death she was working as a telephone operator. She is buried at Inglewood, CA.

  3. Jessie Woodrow Sayre (née Wilson; August 28, 1887 – January 15, 1933) was a daughter of US President Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson.She was a political activist, worked for women's suffrage, social issues, to promote her father's call for the creation of the League of Nations, and was significant in the Massachusetts Democratic Party during the 1920s.

  4. Browse 24 eleanor wilson mcadoo photos and images available, or start a new search to explore more photos and images. Portrait of American author Eleanor Randolph Wilson , the youngest daughter of President and Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, as she stands near some ironwork...

  5. Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo (1889-1967). Youngest daughter of Woodrow and Ellen Louise Axson Wilson, born in Middletown, Connecticut, 5 October 1889. Married to William Gibbs McAdoo, at the White House, 7 May 1914. Divorced 1934. Well known public speaker and radio commentator.

  6. Eleanor Wilson and William Gibbs McAdoo married on the evening of May 7, 1914. Eleanor, the younger sister of Jessie Wilson, had a smaller but exquisite wedding in the East Room. Because details of Jessie’s wedding gown had been leaked before her wedding, or perhaps in an attempt to get ahead of the press, the White House invited famed ...

  7. Margaret A. Wilson writes Eleanor Wilson McAdoo with personal news, and with advice concerning her sister's book. Charles Catlett to Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo Charles Catlett writes Eleanor Wilson McAdoo a letter to inform her of the establishment of the Wilson birthplace, and to ask for family photographs.