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  1. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Martha Washington was born Martha Dandridge on June 2, 1731, in New Kent County, Virginia, on the Chestnut Grove plantation. She was raised and educated with an emphasis on skills seen as ...

  2. Martha Washington was publicly silent on matters of politics. Although she did give one speech during her eight-year tenure, it had no political overtones; she merely thanked the troops who had escorted her to the capital and the crowd that had turned out to welcome her. Nevertheless, she did have an interest in the affairs of the new country.

  3. www.history.com › first-ladies › martha-washingtonMartha Washington - HISTORY

    16 de dic. de 2009 · Martha Washington (1731-1802) was an American first lady (1789–97) and the wife of George Washington, first president of the United States and commander in chief of the colonial armies during ...

  4. Martha Dandridge Custis Washington, ( Condado de New Kent, 2 de junio de 1731- Mount Vernon, 22 de mayo de 1802) fue la esposa de George Washington y pionera en cuanto a ser primera dama de los Estados Unidos, al serlo entre los años 1789 y 1797. Datos rápidos 1.a primera dama de los Estados Unidos, Presidente ...

  5. Martha Washington’s world expanded immeasurably during the Revolutionary War, which she strongly supported.Suddenly, after having lived her entire life in Virginia, now in her mid-40s she found herself traveling to other parts of the country for all eight years of the war, to spend time with Washington at his winter quarters.

  6. Martha Washington’s niece, Frances Bassett, married George Washington’s nephew, George Augustine Washington, at Mount Vernon on October 15, 1785. The couple lived at Mount Vernon for most of the next decade. In April of 1787, Frances Washington gave birth to her first child. Sadly the boy became sick and died within the month.

  7. This beautiful memorial was made c. 1808-1812 by Eliza Gould in honor of George and Martha Washington. Martha Washington is the first and only woman to grace the primary portrait of U.S. paper currency. A series of lesson plans that uses Martha Washington to integrate women's history into the American Revolution.