Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Jessie Woodrow Wilson was born 28 August 1887 in Gainesville, Georgia, United States to Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) and Ellen Louise Axson (1860-1914) and died 15 January 1933 Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of unspecified causes. She married Francis Bowes Sayre (1885-1972) 25 November 1913 in White House, Washington, D.C., United States.

  2. Frances Sayre left instructions that the personal letters between Jessie Sayre Wilson and her husband were to be destroyed. After some discussion with Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library, Sayre family decided to save them for the time being with the donated collection and restrict access to the correspondence.

  3. Margaret Wilson writes to Jessie Wilson Sayre about her music and various social interactions while Jessie has been away. Edward W. Axson to Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre Edward Axson is glad the Jessie Wilson Sayre’s surgery went well, and he wishes her a quick recovery and says he is disappointed she and her mother won’t be able to be at the wedding.

  4. 26 de sept. de 2002 · Woodrow W. Sayre Was Adventurous Climber, Thinker Philosophy professor and mountain climber Woodrow Wilson Sayre died at his home in Vineyard Haven, on Sept. 16. He was 83. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Williams College, Dr. Sayre served in the United States Air Force from 1942 to 1947 before earning his master's and doctorate degrees from Harvard University. He was then a professor of ...

  5. Career. She was the middle sister of Margaret Woodrow Wilson and Eleanor Wilson McAdoo. After her graduation from Goucher, she worked at a settlement home in Philadelphia for three years. White House years. In July 1913, four months after her father assumed the presidency, the Wilsons announced Jessie"s engagement to Francis Bowes Sayre, Senior.

  6. Harry S. Truman Library & Museum. 500 W US Hwy 24 Independence, MO 64050 816-268-8200 | 800-833-1225 Fax: 816-268-8295

  7. 14 de abr. de 2017 · Perhaps it was the president’s daughter, Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre, who persuaded her father to soften his stance - though the more likely explanation was that Wilson realized this anti-suffrage position would cost the Democratic Party seats in Congress. 19 That fall he expressed verbal support for the suffrage campaign in New York, but ultimately the reports of how suffragists were ...