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  1. Letitia "Letty" Christian Semple (née Tyler, May 11, 1821 – December 28, 1907) was an American society lady, educator, and briefly an unofficial First Lady during her father John Tyler's presidency.

  2. Semple. Daughter of President John Tyler and his first wife, Letitia; acted as White House hostess in 1844. Married James A. Semple in 1839; opened a school, the Eclectic Institute, in Baltimore, Maryland.

  3. Letitia Tyler-Semple (18211907), una educadora casada con James Semple, a quien su padre nombró monedero en la EE. UU. Navy, en 1839. El matrimonio fue infeliz. Poco antes de la Guerra de Secesión , dejó a su marido para abrir una escuela, el Eclectic Institute, en Baltimore .

  4. Letty Semple prominently hung the only life oil portrait of her mother over the mantle in her bedroom at the Louise Home, always considering Letitia Tyler to have somehow been the only legitimate wife of her father, the tenth President.

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  5. Letitia Tyler. By 1841, Letitia Christian Tyler, victim of a paralytic stroke, was an invalid. Yet her poor physical health, which she had endured for two years, did not prevent her from overseeing the finances of her family's successful Virginia plantation.

  6. 21 de sept. de 2016 · Letitia Tyler, however, holds an unusual record among First Ladies, one involving the most important role of all to her, that of mother. She gave birth to eight children, the greatest number of any presidential spouse, a record she shares with Lucy Hayes.

  7. 3 de mar. de 2017 · Martha Washington, Sarah Polk, Betty Taylor, Julia Grant, Harriet Lane, Dolley Madison, Louisa Catherine Adams, and Letitia Tyler Semple were all referred to by this title near the turn of the twentieth century, even though such a designation was not in popular use during their time in the White House. 6