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  1. Letitia "Letty" Christian Semple (née Tyler, May 11, 1821 – December 28, 1907) was an American society lady, educator, and briefly an unofficial First Lady during her father John Tyler 's presidency. The National First Ladies' Library named Semple and her sister-in-law Priscilla Tyler "First ladies who never married presidents". [1]

  2. Letitia Tyler-Semple (1821–1907), una educadora casada con James Semple, a quien su padre nombró monedero en la EE. UU. Navy, en 1839. El matrimonio fue infeliz. Poco antes de la Guerra de Secesión, dejó a su marido para abrir una escuela, el Eclectic Institute, en Baltimore.

  3. Tyler. Semple. Daughter of President John Tyler and his first wife, Letitia; acted as White House hostess in 1844. Married James A. Semple in 1839; opened a school, the Eclectic Institute, in Baltimore, Maryland.

  4. Seven children; three sons, four daughters; Mary Tyler Jones (15 April, 1815 - 17 June, 1847); Robert Tyler (9 September 1816 - 3 December, 1877); John Tyler, Jr. (17 April, 1819 - 26 January, 1896); Letitia Christian Tyler Semple (11 May, 1821 - 28 December, 1907); Elizabeth Tyler Waller (1820 -1870); Alice Tyler Denison (23 March, 1827 - 8 ...

  5. 12 de mar. de 2020 · Biography. Letitia was born in 1821. She was the daughter of John Tyler and Letitia Tyler. She married at the age of eighteen to James Alexander Semple, a Captain in the Navy. He was assigned abroad at sea often so she lived as a hostess at the White House in 1844 after Priscilla Cooper Tyler and her husband Robert Tyler moved to Philidelphia.

  6. Daughter of President John Tyler and his first wife, Letitia; acted as White House hostess in 1844. Married James A. Semple in 1839; opened a school, the Eclectic Institute, in Baltimore, Maryland.

  7. 21 de sept. de 2016 · Letitia Tyler Semple at the time she served as First Lady, (NFLL) Letty Tyler Semple had moved into the White House with her father when he first took possession of it, but evacuated in anger before his presidency ended when, as a widower, he eloped in June of 1844 with his second wife, the New York socialite Julia Gardiner.