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  1. Angélica Singleton Van Buren (13 de febrero de 1818 - 29 de diciembre de 1877), nuera del octavo presidente de los Estados Unidos Martin Van Buren. Al casarse con el hijo del presidente, Abraham Van Buren asumió el puesto de primera dama de los Estados Unidos, ya que la esposa del presidente había muerto 17 años antes.

  2. Angélica Van Buren - EcuRed. Página. Discusión. Ver código. Historial. Angélica Van Buren. Fue la nuera del octavo presidente de los Estados Unidos, Martin Van Buren. Al casarse con el hijo del presidente, asumió el puesto de Primera dama, ya que la esposa del presidente había muerto 17 años antes. Sumario. 1 Síntesis biográfica. 2 Educación.

  3. Sarah Angelica Van Buren (née Singleton; February 13, 1818 – December 29, 1877) was an American heiress and a daughter-in-law of the eighth president of the United States, Martin Van Buren. She was married to the President's son, Abraham Van Buren II.

  4. Because Martin Van Buren never remarried after his wife, Hannah, died on February 5, 1819, Angelica filled the role of first lady in Van Burens White House.

  5. Angelica Van Buren. When Martin Van Buren moved into the executive mansion in 1837, he had been a widower for nearly two decades. No first lady, then, took up residence in the White House with the new president. But during Van Buren’s tenure, his eldest son Abraham met, and eventually married, Angelica Singleton.

  6. Architecture: 1850s-1890s. 1850sJames Buchanan, at the urging of his niece and White House hostess Harriet Lane, added a wooden greenhouse on the roof of the west terrace in 1857, adjacent to the State Dining Room. One could enter a private world of plants and flowers grown for decorating the house.

  7. 31 de may. de 2023 · Reference. Angelica Singleton became first lady to a president whom she had not even known when he had won the election in 1836. Yet she played a major role during his term at the White House—the “Executive Mansion”—and set numerous precedents for the women who followed her.