Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (née le 16 avril 1886 à Gainesville (Géorgie), morte le 12 février 1944 à Pondichéry) est la première des enfants du président des États-Unis Woodrow Wilson et son épouse Ellen Wilson. À la mort de sa mère le 6 août 1914, Margaret Woodrow Wilson joue le rôle d'hôtesse de la Maison-Blanche jusqu'au remariage de Wilson le 18 décembre 1915.

  2. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (April 16, 1886 – February 12, 1944) was the eldest child of President Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. Her two siblings were Jessie and Eleanor. After her mother's death in 1914, Margaret served her father as the White House social hostess, [1] the title later known as first lady. Her father remarried in 1915.

  3. Wilson died August 6, 1914. The daughters are: Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, and Eleanor Randolph Wilson. From: HST estate 12/3/74; transferred from Museum Collection 5/28/75.

  4. 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 .

  5. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (April 16, 1886 – February 12, 1944) was the eldest child of President Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. Her two siblings were Jessie and Eleanor. After her mother's death in 1914, Margaret served her father as the White House social hostess, the title later known as first lady .

  6. Wilson, Margaret Woodrow, 1886-1944, “Margaret Woodrow Wilson to Sri Aurobindo,” c. 1938, WWP19649, Eleanor Wilson McAdoo Collection at the University of California-Santa Barbara, Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library & Museum, Staunton, Virginia.

  7. Margaret Woodrow Wilson considered these the happiest years of her life. Jessie Woodrow Wilson Born in Gainesville on August 28, 1887, Jessie Wilson was the most politically active of President Wilson’s daughters—although not always in the direction he preferred.