Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Florence Harding. Florence Kling Harding admitted that she had "only one real hobby -- my husband." To this end, she assisted President Warren G. Harding in all his endeavors, from the newspaper business to the United States Senate, and finally to the presidency of the United States. She was her husband's political adviser, boasting, "I know ...

  2. 15 de ago. de 2017 · Florence Harding started out life as the wealthiest young woman of an Ohio town. She ended it the widow of a scandal-plagued president. Born on this day in 1860, Florence Harding would go on to ...

  3. 31 de may. de 2023 · Florence Harding "This biography reveals the never-before-told story of First Lady Florence Harding's phenomenal rise to power." "Carl Sferrazza Anthony not only recounts the drama of Florence Harding's personality but uses the White House to bring to life Jazz Age America.

  4. Florence Harding did not live to see the publication of Nan Britton's book, The President's Daughter nor the one written by former F.B.I. agent Gaston Means,The Strange Death of President Harding. A friend of Jess Smith and an acquaintance of Evalyn McLean, Mean wrote a book that devastated the reputation of Florence Harding, accusing her of poisoning the President.

  5. Florence "Flossie" Harding, née Florence Mabel Kling le 15 août 1860 à Marion (Ohio), morte le 21 novembre 1924, fut la « Première dame » des États-Unis du 4 mars 1921 au 2 août 1923 en sa qualité d'épouse du 29e président des États-Unis d'Amérique, Warren Gamaliel Harding .

  6. Today, the White House Association released the 50th episode of The 1600 Sessions. In this episode, Association President Stewart McLaurin reflects on 49 episodes of The 1600 Sessions. Returning to some of his favorite moments from past episodes, McLaurin highlights some of the most impactful moments in the podcast series.

  7. 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 ...