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  1. Jessie Wilson Sayre. edit. Language. Label. Description. Also known as. English. Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre. American presidential daughter and activist (1887–1933)

  2. Frances Sayre left instructions that the personal letters between Jessie Sayre Wilson and her husband were to be destroyed. After some discussion with Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library, Sayre family decided to save them for the time being with the donated collection and restrict access to the correspondence.

  3. Letters, photos, documents of President Wilson’s second daughter, Jessie. On her mother’s death in 1914, Jessie became one of her father’s closest confidantes.

  4. 4 de jun. de 2013 · Wilson was appalled when he discovered that many of the women prisoners had gone on a hunger strike and were being force fed in the prison. He finally stepped in toward the fight for women’s enfranchisement, joining his daughter, leading suffragist Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre.

  5. Wilson, Woodrow, 1856-1924, “Woodrow Wilson to Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre,” 1913 December 8, WWP17472, Jessie Wilson Sayre Correspondence, Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library & Museum, Staunton, Virginia.

  6. Sayre's father, Francis Bowes Sayre Sr., was a Harvard University law professor who later became an assistant secretary of state, and his paternal grandfather, Robert H. Sayre, was vice president and chief engineer of the Lehigh Valley Railroad. His mother was President Wilson's daughter, Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre.

  7. Description. Three series: (1) Personal papers and records of President Woodrow Wilson's daughters Eleanor Wilson McAdoo, her husband William Gibbs McAdoo, and their two children Ellen Wilson Mcadoo Henshaw and Mary Faith McAdoo Haddad; (2) Personal papers and records of President Woodrow Wilson, his first wife Ellen Axson Wilson, and their two ...