Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 8 de mar. de 2019 · A fine book, a good painting, a lovely concert, a good speech, a rare geological specimen, a research project always held her attention. [Stanford President Ray Wilbur at Lou Henry Hoover’s memorial service, 1944] After her death, it came to light just how focused on the needs of others Lou Henry Hoover had been throughout her entire life.

  2. Lou Henry Hoover Gallery. Lou Henry Hoover, humanitarian, Girl Scout leader, and First Lady of the United States, was born in Waterloo, Iowa, in 1874. She spent the first decade of her life in Iowa, where she developed a deep appreciation for outdoor life and camping. She moved with her family to California in 1885, where she continued her ...

  3. 19 de abr. de 2021 · Lou Henry met Herbert Hoover while the two were studying geology at Stanford in the 1890s. They married and moved abroad after Henry’s graduation. Herbert Hoover became a distinguished mining engineer, and Lou Henry Hoover, unable to find a position doing geological fieldwork, instead cultivated an interest in history to stay engaged in ...

  4. 3 de may. de 2024 · Material relating to Lou Henry Hoover includes biographies (1928), correspondence (1915-1927), Lou Henry Hoover’s translations, footage of her work with the Girl Scouts and with her husband. LARGE (JEAN HENRY) MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS - Jean Henry Large was the younger sister of Lou Henry

  5. Lou Henry Hoover (29 de marzu de 1874, Waterloo (es) – 7 de xineru de 1944, Nueva York) foi la esposa del presidente Herbert Hoover casaos nel añu 1899. Mientres los años 1929 hasta'l 1933 foi la Primer dama de los Estaos Xuníos .

  6. Lou Henry Hoover, 1874–1944 | Hoover Institution. The Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Stanford Libraries, and the Hoover Institution Library & Archives are pleased to present this celebration of the incredible 150 year legacy of the extraordinary Lou Henry Hoover.

  7. Lou Henry Hoover died of a heart ailment on January 7, 1944, in New York City. Because Lou Henry Hoover was the wife of the President who failed to solve the Great Depression -- and because she preceded Eleanor Roosevelt, the woman who remade the position of First Lady -- her contemporaries, as well as historians, have tended to disparage or overlook her achievements.