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  1. Frances Sayre left instructions that the personal letters between Jessie Sayre Wilson and her husband were to be destroyed. After some discussion with Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library, Sayre family decided to save them for the time being with the donated collection and restrict access to the correspondence.

  2. Francis Bowes Sayre Jr. (January 17, 1915 – October 3, 2008) was Dean of the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., for 27 years. He was the first grandchild of Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States . He was a vocal opponent of segregation, poverty, McCarthyism, and the Vietnam War.

  3. Eleanor Sayre (Niece) Edith Wilson (stepmother) Eleanor Randolph Wilson McAdoo (October 16, 1889 – April 5, 1967) was an American writer and the youngest daughter of American president Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. Wilson had two sisters, Margaret Woodrow Wilson and Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre .

  4. www.thehopkinthomasproject.com › TheHopkinThomasWoodrow Wilson Sayre

    16 de sept. de 2002 · Led first American expedition to North face of Mount Everest, 1962. Address in 2001: W. Chop Road, Vinyard Haven, Massachusetts 02568. Telephone (508) 693-9243. Massachusetts Death Index, 1970-2003 Massachusetts Death Index, 1970-2003 Name: Woodrow Wilson Sayre Death Place: Tisbury Death Date: 16 Sep 2002 Birth Date: 22 Feb 1919 Spouse ...

  5. Brief Life History of Woodrow Wilson. When Woodrow Wilson Sayre was born on 22 February 1919, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, his father, Francis Bowes Sayre, was 33 and his mother, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, was 31. He married Edith Warren Chase on 23 May 1942, in Milton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

  6. www.thehopkinthomasproject.com › TheHopkinThomasJessie Woodrow Wilson

    Jessie Woodrow Wilson Sayre (August 28, 1887 – January 15, 1933) was a daughter of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and a political activist. “She worked vigorously for women's suffrage, social issues, and to promote her father's call for a League of Nations, and emerged as a force in the Massachusetts Democratic Party.”[1]

  7. Letters, photos, documents of President Wilson’s second daughter, Jessie. On her mother’s death in 1914, Jessie became one of her father’s closest confidantes.