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  1. C-SPAN First Ladies: Influence and Image. FIRST LADIES GET THEIR TURN IN SPOTLIGHT IN NEW C-SPAN HISTORICAL SERIES. Cable Network teams with White House Historical Association for 35-part feature series.In a first-of-its-kind project for television, C-SPAN is teaming up with the White House Historical Association (WHHA) for a new, two-season original series: “First Ladies: Influence and ...

  2. Jane Means Appleton Pierce was the wife of the 14th President, Franklin Pierce. She served as First Lady of the United States from 1853 to 1857. In looks and in pathetic destiny young Jane Means Appleton resembled the heroine of a Victorian novel. The gentle dignity of her face reflected her sensitive, retiring personality and physical weakness.

  3. Jane Pierce (1806–­1863) Nacida en Hampton, Nuevo Hampshire. Jane Means Appleton Pierce había sufrido la pérdida de dos hijos cuando su esposo Franklin Pierce fue electo presidente. Dos meses antes de la investidura, en 1853, vio morir al único hijo que les quedaba, Benjamin, en un accidente de tren. Nunca se recuperó de la tragedia.

  4. 12 de mar. de 2024 · Jane Pierce was born on March 12, 1806, in Hampton, New Hampshire. She married Franklin Pierce in 1834 and became first lady of the United States in 1853, when Pierce was sworn in as president. Her 11-year-old son, Benjamin, died in a train accident two months before her husband took office, following the early deaths of the couple's other two sons.

  5. 25 de sept. de 2018 · In 1620, Rolfe married Jane Pierce, the daughter of Captain William Pierce, and they had a daughter named Elizabeth. In 1621, the Virginia colony began actively raising funds for the College of Henricus, a boarding school for young Native Americans to train them to become more English.

  6. Jane Means (Appleton) Pierce (1806-1863) was the daughter of a New Hampshire Congregational minister and president of Bowdoin College. She married then-Congressman Franklin Pierce in 1834. She was a petite and attractive woman, but fell into depression and delicate health after the deaths of two young sons.

  7. This engraving of First Lady Jane Means Appleton Pierce was completed by John Chester Buttre in 1886. As the daughter of a Congregationalist minister, Mrs. Pierce discouraged her husband's political ambitions, fainting at the news he was selected as the Democratic nominee for president. During her husband's years in office from March 4, 1853 to ...