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  1. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (16 April 1886 – 12 February 1944), Jessie Woodrow Wilson [Sayre] (27 August 1887 – 15 January 1933), Eleanor “Nell” Wilson [McAdoo] (16 October 1889 – 5 April 1967).

  2. In 1912 McAdoo worked hard on behalf of New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson’s presidential campaign. It was also the same year McAdoo’s wife, Sarah, died. Wilson was grateful to McAdoo for his support and named him as Secretary of the Treasury. McAdoo was soon courting President Wilson’s daughter Eleanor and the two were married in a ceremony held at the White House in 1914. The groom was ...

  3. (McAdoo, Eleanor Wilson, 1889-1967) A Wikipedia article about this author is available. McAdoo, Eleanor Wilson, 1889-1967: The Priceless Gift: The Love Letters of Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Axson Wilson (New York et al.: McGraw-Hill Book Co., c1962) , also by Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Axson Wilson, contrib. by Raymond B. Fosdick (page images at HathiTrust)

  4. Jessie Woodrow Wilson was born in Gainesville, Georgia, the second daughter of Woodrow and Ellen Axson Wilson. [2] She was the middle sister of Margaret Woodrow Wilson and Eleanor Wilson McAdoo. She was educated privately in Princeton, New Jersey at Miss Fine's School and at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland. [2] She was a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. After her graduation from ...

  5. Formal portrait of Ellen Louise Axson Wilson, wife of Woodrow Wilson, and their three daughters, taken at the White House. Mrs. Wilson died August 6, 1914. The daughters are: Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, and Eleanor Randolph Wilson. From: HST estate 12/3/74; transferred from Museum Collection 5/28/75.

  6. Photo shows Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo (1889-1967), an author and daughter of President Woodrow Wilson. She married Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo at the White House on May 7, 1914. (Source: Flickr Commons project, 2010) Glass negatives. - Title and date from data provided by the Bain News Service on the negative.

  7. Another week has gone by, and, alas! has brought a new evidence of the critical difficulties that are in our way in keeping this country out of the war. The case of the Arabic seems to me a way worse than that of the Lusitania because none of the excuses they alleged in her case seem to have been present in this. I fear that we shall have to take some very decided step, probably the severance ...