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  1. Ellen Axson Wilson (1860-1914), the first wife of President Woodrow Wilson, was a reform-minded First Lady and an artist in the American Impressionist style. Born in Savannah Georgia in 1860, Ellen demonstrated artistic ability from an early age. From 1875 to 1878 she studied art with Helen F. Fairchild at the Female College in Rome, Georgia.

  2. Ellen Axson Wilson. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, 1910. Courtesy: Library of Congress. The future 28th first lady was born in Savannah, Georgia, on May 15, 1860, and lived most of her childhood in Rome, Georgia; An extremely bright but shy girl, Ellie Lou, as she was known, read widely and even taught herself trigonometry.

  3. Ellen Wilson. Date of birth. 15 May 1860. Savannah. Date of death. 6 August 1914. White House. Manner of death. natural causes.

  4. Ellen Axson was the daughter of a Georgia Presbyterian minister, and she studied art in New York City before marrying Woodrow Wilson in 1885. She brought up three daughters and followed her husband’s academic and political career, from Bryn Mawr and Princeton to the New Jersey State House and the White House.

  5. Ellen Louise Axson grew up in Rome, Georgia, where her father, the Reverend S.E. Axson, was a Presbyterian minister. Thomas Woodrow Wilson first saw her when he was about six and she only a baby. In 1883, as a young lawyer from Atlanta, “Tommy” visited Rome and met “Miss Ellie Lou” again — a beautiful girl now, keeping house for a bereaved father.

  6. Ellen Axson Wilson, née le 15 mai 1860 et morte le 6 août 1914, en sa qualité d'épouse du 28e président des États-Unis d'Amérique, Woodrow Wilson, fut la Première dame des États-Unis du 4 mars 1913 au 6 août 1914. Le couple a trois filles : Margaret, Jessie, and Eleanor. Après sa mort, le président se remarie avec Edith Bolling .

  7. 17 de dic. de 2015 · Ellen Axson Wilson in 1910. Soon after the inauguration of her husband, Woodrow Wilson, to office in March of 1913, Ellen Axson Wilson closed a rental agreement with Author Tedcastle for a four month rental of a summer property in Cornish, New Hampshire.