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  1. Mary Elizabeth “Betty” Taylor Dandridge. Winchester, VA – May 25, 1862. In May of 1862, Betty Dandridge sat in the front parlor of her home in downtown Winchester. She was reading a book when her husband came in to tell her that a battle had just begun around Mr. Wood’s farm. A distant rumble is felt and the wavy glass panels shook ...

  2. Presidential Daughters: Mary Elizabeth Taylor Bliss. Mary Elizabeth Bliss served as White House hostess in her ill mother’s, Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor, place. Betty, as she was called, was born on April 20, 1824. She was the youngest of the Taylor children and one of three daughters to survive childhood.

  3. 8 de ene. de 2021 · Mary Todd Lincoln’s capelet made by Elizabeth Keckley, c. 1861. One of the exhibition’s main goals is to consider the sometimes unspoken rules the first lady must follow regarding how she ...

  4. His sister Mary Elizabeth, who had married William Wallace Smith Bliss in 1848, served as her father's White House hostess. Although Taylor chose to join the Confederacy, his uncle, Joseph Pannell Taylor, served in the U.S. Army as a Brigadier-General.

  5. When Mary Elizabeth Bliss was born on 31 December 1932, in Fremont, Sandusky, Ohio, United States, her father, John William E Bliss, was 23 and her mother, Edith May Shriner, was 24. She married Irvin LeRoy Fisher Sr on 15 May 1950, in Sandusky, Ohio, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons.

  6. Mary Elizabeth Bliss Mary Elizabeth Taylor Bliss (April 20, 1824 - July 25, 1909) was the daughter of President Zachary Taylor and First Lady Margaret Taylor. She served as White House hostess due to her mother's ill health. On December 8, 1848, Mary married William Bliss, the future president's secretary. Bliss died in 1853.

  7. Mary Elizabeth “Betty” Taylor Bliss Dandridge, the only surviving daughter of Zachary Taylor and Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor (1788–1852), was raised in frontier forts while her army general father conducted the Black Hawk War (1832) and the Second Seminole War (1835–42). Her mother, of whom no portraits or other accurate likenesses survive, worked hard to raise ten children while ...