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  1. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Background In a campaign already dominated by smear attacks and accusations, Andrew Jackson was elected president in 1828.Less than a year after taking office, Jackson’s Secretary of War, John Eaton, married Margaret “Peggy” O’Neill, the daughter of William O'Neill, owner of the Franklin House, a popular Washington, D.C. boarding house and tavern.

  2. 11 de ago. de 2013 · When the Democrats lost power in 1840, John and Peggy Eaton returned to Washington, D. C. where they were once again barely acknowledged by Washington society. The irrepressible Peggy again raised eyebrows when she, then age fifty-nine, married the nineteen year old dancing instructor of her grandchildren.

  3. Margaret O'Neill (eller O'Neale) Eaton (3 december 1799 - 8 november 1879), Även känd under namnet Peggy Eaton, spelat en central roll i Petticoat Affair genom sitt äktenskap med senator John Henry Eaton, som orsakade upplösning av firman av Andrew Jackson.

  4. 21 de jul. de 2023 · The Petticoat Affair — also known as the Peggy Eaton Affair — was a political scandal that took place from 1829 to 1831. It involved President Andrew Jackson, First Lady Emily Donelson, the members of his cabinet, and the wives of his cabinet members. The conflict was largely between the wives of the cabinet members, who refused to ...

  5. 26 de nov. de 2011 · The Scandal. Eight months after her first husband's death, Peggy married John Eaton, the man who had taken care of her in every way her late husband asked him to, plus a little bit more. President Jackson had known and befriended Peggy way before she had became an Eaton, and it was actually by his advice that she and John Eaton had married.

  6. Margaret O'Neill (ou O'Neale) Eaton (3 de dezembro de 1799 - 8 de novembro de 1879), Também conhecida pelo nome de Peggy Eaton, desempenhou um papel central no caso Petticoat por meio de seu casamento com o senador John Henry Eaton, que causou a dissolução da empresa de Andrew Jackson.

  7. Peggy (O'Neill) Eaton Peggy Eaton, also known as Margaret O'Neale Timberlake, was a central figure in the early 19th-century Washington, D.C., social and political scene. Her notoriety stemmed from her controversial background and the rumors surrounding her.