Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Alice Hathaway Roosevelt (née Lee; July 29, 1861 – February 14, 1884) was an American socialite and the first wife of President Theodore Roosevelt. Two days after giving birth to their only child, she died from undiagnosed Bright's disease.

  2. 18 de nov. de 2022 · Women Who Shaped History. A Smithsonian magazine special report. History | November 18, 2022. From a White House Wedding to a Pet Snake, Alice Roosevelts Escapades Captivated America....

    • Francine Uenuma
    • theodore roosevelt and wife alice1
    • theodore roosevelt and wife alice2
    • theodore roosevelt and wife alice3
    • theodore roosevelt and wife alice4
    • theodore roosevelt and wife alice5
  3. Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt (1861-1884) was Theodore Roosevelts first wife. Born in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, on July 29, 1861, to the wealthy banker George Cabot Lee and his wife Caroline Watts Haskell Lee, Alice met Theodore when she was seventeen years old.

  4. Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt was Theodore Roosevelts first wife and mother to their only child together, Alice Lee Roosevelt. Alice Hathaway Lee was a beautiful and dainty woman from a wealthy Bostonian family. She was known as “sunshine” to her friends and family due to her bright personality.

  5. 20 de ago. de 2018 · Theodore met Alice on a weekend visit to the home of a Harvard classmate in October of 1878. Theodore was nineteen, Alice was seventeen. He was smitten, or maybe you can even say he fell in love at first sight. In either case, this is where the love story of Theodore and Alice begins.

  6. 22 de abr. de 2014 · The couple married on Theodore’s twenty-second birthday, October 27, 1880, and honeymooned at the Roosevelts summer home at Oyster Bay, which was named “Tranquility.” After this tranquil interlude, Theodore and Alice settled with his family at their home in New York City. Sources: Putnam, Carleton.

  7. When Roosevelt married Edith Kermit Carow in 1886, he already had a daughter, Alice, from his first marriage. He and Edith had five more children—Theodore, Kermit, Ethel, Archibald, and Quentin. For TR, his family was like having his own private circus. His children were everywhere, having the complete run of the place.