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  1. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (April 16, 1886 – February 12, 1944) was the eldest child of President Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. Her two siblings were Jessie and Eleanor. After her mother's death in 1914, Margaret served her father as the White House social hostess, [1] the title later known as first lady. Her father remarried in 1915.

  2. 25 de mar. de 2023 · Born in Middletown, Connecticut, she married Wilson's Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo at the White House on May 7, 1914.[1] They had a daughter Ellen Wilson McAdoo (1915-1946) and a second daughter, Mary Faith McAdoo (1920-1988). She divorced McAdoo in 1934. Because she had written a biography about her father, she served as an ...

  3. Formal portrait of Ellen Louise Axson Wilson, wife of Woodrow Wilson, and their three daughters, taken at the White House. Mrs. Wilson died August 6, 1914. The daughters are: Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, and Eleanor Randolph Wilson. From: HST estate 12/3/74; transferred from Museum Collection 5/28/75.

  4. 31 de mar. de 2006 · While First Lady, Wilson helped to plan the weddings of her two younger daughters. Both ceremonies took place at the White House. Jessie Woodrow Wilson married Francis Bowes Sayre in 1913, and Eleanor Randolph Wilson married William Gibbs McAdoo in 1914. The eldest daughter, Margaret Woodrow Wilson, never married and pursued a career as a vocalist.

  5. Eleanor Randolph Wilson (1889–1967), she married Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo. Ellen Axson Wilson by her friend Frederic Yates - 1906 Insisting that her children must not be born as Yankees , Ellen went to stay with relatives in Gainesville, Georgia for Margaret's birth in 1886 and Jessie's in 1887.

  6. 24 de oct. de 2006 · ELEANOR WILSON MCADOO Digitalpublicationdate 2003-11-22 00:00:00 Identifier woodrowwilsons001303mbp Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t0dv1cx24 Pagelayout FirstPageLeft Pages 357 Scanningcenter RMSC-IIITH Totalpages 301

  7. Eleanor Wilson McAdoo. Self: Selig-Tribune, No. 44. Keep track of how much of Eleanor Wilson McAdoo’s work you have seen. Go to your list.