Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 15 de may. de 2019 · Mary Todd Lincoln (December 13, 1818–July 16, 1882) was the wife of President Abraham Lincoln. She became a figure of controversy and criticism during her time in the White House. After his death and the deaths of three of her children, she suffered great grief and was emotionally erratic.

  2. When Lincoln learned that he had had won the presidential election of 1860, he reportedly ran home yelling "Mary, Mary, we are elected." She took on the role of first lady-from hosting balls to visiting troops-with enthusiasm. However, controversy and tragedy marked Mary Todd Lincoln’s life in the White House.

  3. Mary Lincoln. Mary Todd was born on December 13, 1818, in Lexington, Kentucky. She was the fourth of seven children born to Robert Smith Todd and Eliza Ann Parker Todd. Her mother Eliza died when Mary was six years old. Her father, a wealthy businessman and slave owner, remarried Elizabeth Humphreys in 1826.

  4. Mary Lincoln (1861) Mary Lincoln (* 13.Dezember 1818 in Lexington, Kentucky als Mary Ann Todd; † 16. Juli 1882 in Springfield, Illinois) war die Ehefrau von US-Präsident Abraham Lincoln und die First Lady der Vereinigten Staaten von 1861 bis 1865.

  5. Mary Todd Lincoln, née Mary Ann Todd le 13 décembre 1818 à Lexington au Kentucky, et morte le 16 juillet 1882 à Springfield dans l' Illinois, était l'épouse d' Abraham Lincoln, seizième président des États-Unis, et fut donc Première dame des États-Unis de 1861 à 1865 .

  6. Mary Lincoln. While Abraham Lincoln usually is regarded as savior of the United States, his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, is often remembered as a shrew and ranked by historians as the worst First Lady in American history. While she could be spiteful, dismissive, corrupt, and jealous, Mary Todd Lincoln could be gracious, caring, and supportive as well.

  7. Mary Ann Todd Lincoln was born the third child to Eliza Ann Parker Todd and Robert Smith Todd on December 13, 1818. Before Mary Ann was born, her eldest sister Elizabeth was born, followed by her sister Frances. The Todd family lived in a quaint two-story, nine-room L-shaped house on Short Street in Lexington, KY.