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  1. As she was dying from tuberculosis in 1883, Andrew Johnson's daughter Mary Johnson Stover prepared a will and bequeathed her assets to selected heirs. The balance of the estate went to her two married daughters but she also left some real estate, four acres [11] of land in Greeneville, to Elizabeth Johnson Forby.

  2. In fact, Eliza McCardle Johnson did not travel to Washington, D.C., until two months later and even then did not assume the traditional duties expected of a presidential spouse. Pleading ill health, she asked her two daughters, Martha Johnson Patterson and Mary Johnson Stover, to take on the role of First Lady.

  3. Andrew Johnson Stover. Born 6 Mar 1860 in Elizabethton, Carter, Tennessee, United States. Ancestors. Son of Daniel Stover II and Mary (Johnson) Brown. Brother of Eliza Johnson (Stover) Maloney, Lillie Stover and Sarah Drake (Stover) Bachman. [spouse (s) unknown] [children unknown] Died 25 Jan 1923 in Elizabethton, Carter, Tennessee, United States.

  4. The next appearance of Dolly Johnson in the documentary record is a photograph. She was photographed holding Andrew Johnson Stover, the grandson of Andrew Johnson by his younger daughter Mary. Andrew Johnson Stover was born March 6, 1860, so the photograph can be roughly dated to 1861.

  5. 23 de dic. de 2022 · Mary Johnson Stover Brown (1832–1883). She married Dan Stover, who served as colonel of the Fourth Tennessee Union Infantry during the Civil War. The Stovers lived on a farm in Carter County, Tennessee. Following the death of her husband in 1864, she married W.R. Brown. Robert Johnson (1834–1869) - lawyer.

  6. 24 de ene. de 2017 · At the end of Johnson's presidency, Mary and her children moved back home. Andrew Stover was reunited with the sights and sounds of his childhood home. Morning fog that rested on high mountaintops, the cool waters of the Watauga gently cascading in timeless fashion, forests full of trees and the wonderment of all God's creatures that lived in them.

  7. 24 de mar. de 2022 · "In 1875 Lizzie and some of her children were living with Mary Stover Brown in Carter County, perhaps to help take care of Eliza Johnson, who was also staying at Mary's farm." (Andrew Johnson Biographical Companion, pg. 270). By 1900 the family moved to Knoxville to seek better opportunity for jobs.