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  1. Mary McElroy (née Arthur; July 5, 1841 – January 8, 1917) was an American woman known as being the sister of the 21st president of the United States, Chester A. Arthur, for whom she served as a hostess (acting as the first lady) for his administration (1881–1885).

  2. Mary McElroy (de soltera Arthur; Greenwich, 5 de julio de 1841-Albany, 8 de enero de 1917) fue hermana del vigésimo primer presidente de los Estados Unidos, Chester A. Arthur, y se desempeñó como anfitriona (efectivamente siendo primera dama interina) durante su administración (1881-1885).

  3. Mary Arthur McElroy (1841–1917) Born Greenwich, New York. The recently widowed Chester Arthur asked his sister, Mary Arthur McElroy, to serve as his official hostess when he became president in 1881.

  4. Mary Arthur was born in New York on July 5, 1841. Mary was the sister of future President Chester A. Arthur, nearly twelve years her senior, and the youngest child of William and Malvina Arthur. As a young woman, she married John E. McElroy, with whom she had four children; the family settled in Albany, New York.

  5. Mary McElroy (de soltera Arthur; Greenwich, 5 de julio de 1841-Albany, 8 de enero de 1917) fue hermana del vigésimo primer presidente de los Estados Unidos, Chester A. Arthur, y se desempeñó como anfitriona (efectivamente siendo primera dama interina) durante su administración (1881-1885).

  6. 31 de may. de 2023 · Mary Arthur was born in New York on July 5, 1841. Mary was the sister of future President Chester A. Arthur, nearly twelve years her senior, and the youngest child of William and Malvina Arthur. As a young woman, she married John E. McElroy, with whom she had four children; the family settled in Albany, New York...

  7. Mary Arthur McElroy died on January 8, 1917, in Atlantic City, NJ, at the age of 76 years of Heart Disease. She is buried in the John E. McElroy family plot. Because she was the sister of the president without the recognition of title, Mary, is often, is omitted from biographies associated with First Ladies.