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  1. 20 de jun. de 2020 · Sarah was named after her paternal grandmother Sarah Murray Drake. Their third child, and only son Andrew Johnson Stover was born on March 6, 1860. You can read a full biography of Mary Johnson Stover on the First Ladies website [1]. During this time Daniel’s older brother David Lincoln Stover died at the age of 38 from unknown causes.

  2. Born Martha Johnson in 1828; died in 1901; daughter of Eliza McCardle Johnson (1810–1876) and Andrew Johnson (1808–1875, 17th president of the U.S., 1865–69); sister of Mary Johnson Stover (1832–1883); married David Trotter Patterson (1818–1891, a judge of the circuit court of Tennessee and later U.S. senator), in 1885; children: two.

  3. Son of Col. Daniel Stover and Mary Johnson. Grandson to President Andrew Johnson. ----- A Big Thank You goes to Find A Grave contributor Bernadette for this information -----

  4. April 19, 2018 ·. On this day in 1883 Mary Stover, Andrew Johnson’s daughter dies. Mary was the third child and second daughter of Andrew and Eliza. She attended the Odd Fellows’ Female Institute in Rogersville, Tennessee. On April 7, 1852 she married Daniel Stover of Carter County and they moved to his farm in the Watauga Valley.

  5. In fact, Eliza McCardle Johnson did not travel to Washington, D.C., until two months later and even then did not assume the traditional duties expected of a presidential spouse. Pleading ill health, she asked her two daughters, Martha Johnson Patterson and Mary Johnson Stover, to take on the role of First Lady.

  6. 23 de dic. de 2022 · Mary Johnson Stover Brown (1832–1883). She married Dan Stover, who served as colonel of the Fourth Tennessee Union Infantry during the Civil War. The Stovers lived on a farm in Carter County, Tennessee. Following the death of her husband in 1864, she married W.R. Brown. Robert Johnson (1834–1869) - lawyer.

  7. 14 de feb. de 2024 · Joseph Stover (1783-1875) and his wife – Esther Yount Stover (1785-1870) were married in 1811 and, like many early Johnson County settlers, came from Elkhart County, Indiana in 1838. Arriving with their children on May 6, 1838 , the Stovers joined with fifteen other pioneers – camping in a circle located about 3/4 of a mile northeast of today’s River Junction .