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  1. Lucretia Garfield. Lucretia Rudolph Garfield, nicknamed "Crete" by her husband, never really enjoyed the formal entertaining required of a first lady. The president sought her political opinion and companionship constantly, and when she became ill at the White House, he was distraught. Mrs. Garfield was at the New Jersey seaside recovering from ...

  2. The death of their three-year-old daughter and Garfield's affair in New York threatened to tear Lucretia and James apart. But the future First Lady's steadfastness and unwavering moral compass ...

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  3. The road to true love proved a bumpy one for James A. Garfield and Lucretia Rudolph, who first met at school in Ohio in the 1850s. Throughout their courtship and early marriage they struggled to determine if they were truly suited to each other, a sometimes painful conversation amply recorded in the hundreds of letters they exchanged during their years together.

  4. Mrs. Lucretia Garfield, ca. 1881. First Lady Lucretia Garfield lived for 36 years after her husband, President James A. Garfield, was assassinated in 1881 by Charles Guiteau. During that time, she became a beloved figure in America, though she shunned publicity. She created the first Presidential Memorial Library and became the matriarch of a ...

  5. 31 de may. de 2023 · Lucretia (Crete) Rudolph was born on April 19, 1832, in Garrettsville, Ohio, to Zebulon and Arabella Mason Rudolph. Sickly as a child, she was an avid reader. In 1850, she entered Western Reserve Eclectic Institute, and she pursued a career in teaching upon graduation.

  6. Lucretia asked Swaim, who had tried to conceal the serious nature of the shooting, to “Tell me the truth.” Swaim told her what he knew, that a gunman, who was angered over Garfield’s treatment of the Stalwart faction of Republicans, thought that removing Garfield would elevate Arthur to the presidency and the country would be better off.

  7. James A. Garfield (born November 19, 1831, near Orange [in Cuyahoga county], Ohio, U.S.—died September 19, 1881, Elberon [now in Long Branch], New Jersey) was the 20th president of the United States (March 4–September 19, 1881). He had the second shortest tenure in U.S. presidential history. When he was shot and incapacitated, serious ...