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  1. Florence Harding. Florence Mabel Kling Harding (15 de Agosto de 1860 - 21 de Novembro de 1924), foi Primeira Dama dos Estados Unidos de 4 de Março de 1921 a 3 de Agosto de 1923, esposa do 29º presidente dos Estados Unidos Warren Gamaliel Harding. [1] Nasceu em Marion, Ohio, filha de Amos Kling, um proeminente banqueiro de Marion, e de Luisa ...

  2. Florence Mabel Harding (kızlık soyadı Kling ; 15 Ağustos 1860 – 21 Kasım 1924), 1921'den 1923'e kadar kocası Başkan Warren G. Harding'in eşi olarak ölümüne kadar Amerika Birleşik Devletleri'nin First Lady'si idi. Florence'in Peter De Wolfe ile olan ilk evliliğinden Marshall adında bir oğlu oldu. Daha sonra boşandı ve Ohio'da ...

  3. 4 de ago. de 2016 · Library of Congress. In 1930, former F.B.I. agent Gaston Means wrote a book that accused Florence of offing her husband. It wasn't accidental food poisoning that had made Harding sick a few days ...

  4. Florence Mabel Kling DeWolfe Harding ( Marion (Ohio), 15 augustus 1860 - aldaar, 21 november 1924) was de echtgenote van Amerikaans president Warren G. Harding en de first lady van het land tussen 1921 en 1923 . Ze was de dochter van Amos Hall Kling, de rijkste man van het dorp en een succesvolle zakenman en zijn vrouw Louisa Bouton Kling.

  5. Florence Mabel Kling DeWolfe Harding, First Lady during the Warren G. Harding administration (1921-23), was born on August 15, 1860. An outspoken supporter of woman suffrage, Mrs. Harding cast her ballot in the presidential campaign of 1920 for her husband. She was the first American First Lady afforded that right, as the Nineteenth Amendment ...

  6. Florence Harding was the first First Lady to vote, following the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920, which granted women the right to vote. Warren Gamaliel Harding (1865-1923) was born in Corsica (now called Blooming Grove), a small town in Morrow County, Ohio. Harding graduated from Ohio Central College in Iberia at the age of sixteen.

  7. Florence eventually burned almost all the presidential papers, an act which has certainly served to cloud the truth regarding the Hardings' knowledge of the corruption around them. Florence Harding survived her husband by only little more than one year, dying in 1924 of complications relating to chronic kidney disease.