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  1. Frank, Sr., will be back, –when?Please tell dear Margaret how I loved her letter to me. It brought me some very happy thoughts. Give my dearest love to Sister Annie, little Annie, Josephine, and to my precious Margaret. You are all very much in my heart. I am well, – chiefly, I think, because I am so generously loved. Your loving Woodrow Wilson

  2. 21 de mar. de 2017 · Six remarkable women accompanied Wilson to the White House on March 4, 1913, and a seventh would rise to prominence two years later. First among them was the president’s first wife, Ellen Axson Wilson. Born on May 15, 1860, in Savannah, Georgia, she was a well-educated woman with a strong intellect complementing that of Woodrow Wilson, whom ...

  3. President Thomas Woodrow Wilson. When President Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born on 28 December 1856, in Staunton, Virginia, United States, his father, Rev. Joseph Ruggles Wilson, was 34 and his mother, Janet E. Woodrow, was 26. He married Ellen Louise Axson on 24 June 1885, in Chatham, Georgia, United States.

  4. Wilson married Ellen Louise Axson on June 24, 1885. Ellen was the daughter of a Presbyterian minister, Samuel Edward Axson, and his wife, Margaret Jane Hoyt. She was born in Savannah, Georgia, and raised in Rome, Georgia. At only 11 years old, she began studying art at the Rome Female College. Marrying Woodrow Wilson.

  5. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (ur. 16 kwietnia 1886 w Gainesville, Georgia , zm. 12 lutego 1944 w Pondicherry, Indie ) – pierwsza dama Stanów Zjednoczonych od 6 sierpnia 1914 do 18 grudnia 1915 jako córka prezydenta Woodrowa Wilsona [1] .

  6. Peas in a Rotting Pod: Woodrow Wilson and Margaret Sanger. November 24, 2015. Rob Schwarzwalder. So, Woodrow Wilson was a racist. This is indisputable. It’s also why many black students at the school for Wilson was once president, Princeton, are calling for a renewed assessment of his legacy there and as president of the United States.

  7. Margaret Woodrow Wilson (sister) Joseph Ruggles Wilson (grandfather) Jessie Woodrow Sayre ( née Wilson; August 28, 1887 – January 15, 1933) was a daughter of US President Woodrow Wilson and Ellen Louise Axson. She was a political activist, worked for women's suffrage, social issues, to promote her father's call for the creation of the League ...