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  1. Around 1889, Florence met and started dating the owner and publisher of one of Marion’s local newspapers. Warren G. Harding, who had purchased the struggling Marion Daily Star in 1884 when he was just 19 years old, was handsome, personable – and broke. Her father, never letting Florence forget about her first mistake in marriage, was vocal ...

  2. Florence Harding did not live to see the publication of Nan Britton's book, The President's Daughter nor the one written by former F.B.I. agent Gaston Means,The Strange Death of President Harding. A friend of Jess Smith and an acquaintance of Evalyn McLean, Mean wrote a book that devastated the reputation of Florence Harding, accusing her of poisoning the President.

  3. Florence Kling Harding. Known as "The Duchess," Florence Mabel Kling Harding served as First Lady from 1921 to 1923 as the wife of President Warren G. Harding. Daughter of the richest man in a small town--Amos Kling, a successful businessman--Florence Mabel Kling was born in Marion, Ohio, in 1860, to grow up in a setting of wealth, position ...

  4. Find out how Florence Harding, America’s first feminist first lady, helped put her husband in the White House. #HistoryChannel Subscribe for more from HISTOR...

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  5. Warren G. Harding had come to Marion when only 16 and, showing a flair for newspaper work, had managed to buy the little Daily Star. When he met Florence a courtship quickly developed. Over Amos Kling’s angry opposition they were married in 1891, in a house that Harding had planned, and this remained their home for the rest of their lives.

  6. 23 de sept. de 2021 · Florence was the oldest of 3 children, and the only female child in her family. Most people would usually associate her first and foremost with her husband Warren G. Harding, but Florence did more than just her First Lady responsibilities. She had a very interesting life prior to marriage and after the death of her husband.

  7. Florence "Flossie" Harding, née Florence Mabel Kling le 15 août 1860 à Marion (Ohio), morte le 21 novembre 1924, fut la « Première dame » des États-Unis du 4 mars 1921 au 2 août 1923 en sa qualité d'épouse du 29e président des États-Unis d'Amérique, Warren Gamaliel Harding .