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  1. Garret Hobart both studied with Tuttle and married his daughter, Jennie. 3. Garret Hobart served in local governmental positions, and then successfully ran for office as a Republican, serving in both the New Jersey General Assembly, where he was elected Speaker in 1874, and the New Jersey Senate, where he became its president in 1881.

  2. 9 de feb. de 2021 · Jennie Tuttle Hobart, the widow of Vice President Garret Hobart, led the grassroots movement against ratification. Gov. Edward I. Edwards was a strong supporter of ratification. He had defeated Nugent in the 1919 Democratic gubernatorial primary by a 54%-42% margin in an epic battle with Jersey City mayor Frank Hague, the Hudson County Democratic boss.

  3. Many Patersonians are familiar with the name Hobart. Often they are more familiar the Garret A. Hobart, 24th Vice President of the United States. However, it...

    • 61 min
    • The Paterson Museum
  4. 9 de abr. de 1989 · April 9, 1989. ''THE Garret and Jennie Hobart Collection of Art'' is the kind of show that even a decade ago would probably not have been mounted, much less reviewed. Fashions have changed as ...

  5. Biography. HOBART, GARRET AUGUSTUS, a Vice President of the United States; born near Long Branch, Monmouth County, N.J., June 3, 1844; attended the common schools and graduated from Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N.J., in 1863; taught school; clerk for the grand jury of Passaic County, N.J., in 1865; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1866 ...

  6. 10 de feb. de 2024 · Jennie Tuttle Hobart was an early 20th century celebrity known for her commitment to women’s rights and her involvement in society. Born September 25, 1849 into a wealthy New York family, she was the daughter of James A. Tuttle, a wealthy industrialist, and Mary Louisa Warner.

  7. njwomenshistory.org › Period_4 › hobartJennie Tuttle Hobart

    Hobart was born and raised in Paterson, the daughter of a prominent attorney. She married Garret Augustus Hobart in 1869 as he was beginning his career as a lawyer and Republican politician. After Garret Hobart was elected William McKinley's vice president, in 1896, the family moved to Washington where Jennie Hobart often served as hostess for McKinley, whose wife was in poor health.