The little-known story of remarkable First Lady Sarah Polk—a brilliant master of the art of high politics and a crucial but unrecognized figure in the history of American feminism. While the Women’s Rights convention was taking place at Seneca Falls in 1848, First Lady Sarah Childress Polk was wielding influence unprecedented for a woman in Washington, D.C. Yet, while history remembers the women of the convention, it has all but forgotten Sarah Polk. Now, in her riveting biography, Amy S. Greenberg brings Sarah’s story into vivid focus. We see Sarah as the daughter of a frontiersman who raised her to discuss politics and business with men; we see the savvy and charm she brandished in order to help her brilliant but unlikeable husband, James K. Polk, ascend to the White House. We watch as she exercises truly extraordinary power as First Lady: quietly manipulating elected officials, shaping foreign policy, and directing a campaign in support of America’s expansionist war against Mexico. And we meet many of the enslaved men and women whose difficult labor made Sarah’s political success possible. Sarah Polk’s life spanned nearly the entirety of the nineteenth-century. But her own legacy, which profoundly transformed the South, continues to endure. Comprehensive, nuanced, and brimming with invaluable insight, Lady First is a revelation of our twelfth First Lady’s complex but essential part in American feminism.
Baldrige is the woman best known as Jackie Kennedy's social secretary during the White House years.
First Lady from Plains, first published in 1984, is Rosalynn’s Carter’s autobiography, covering her life from her childhood in Plains, Georgia, through her time as First Lady.
Drawing on a wide array of untapped, candid sources—from the former first ladies themselves to their political advisers, friends, family members, and residence staff—Kate Andersen Brower, the New York Times bestselling author who ...
For a historical examination of the Odell Waller case, see Richard B. Sherman, The Case of Odell Waller and Virginia Justice, 1940–1942 (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1992). “ramshackle 1931 convertible": PM, Song, 152.
Rachel Jones is a successful businesswoman who has it all.
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... 123 Lind, Jenny, 106–107 Lindbergh, Charles, 271 Louisiana Purchase, 28, 46 MacArthur, Douglas, 283, 310 Madison, ... 410–411 Philippe, King Louis, 73 Phillips, Carrie, 252–253 Pierce, Benjamin, 108, 109, 110 Pierce, Franklin, 107, ...
The First Lady's absence comes in the wake of the scandalous, public revelation of the president's affair, so at first it seems as though she is simply cutting off all contact as she recuperates at a horse farm in Virginia.
... MC; Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee, eds., The Dictionary of National Biography: From the Earliest Times to 1900 (1917; repr., London: Oxford University Press, 1967), 9:1203–1205; Lady Mildred Hope to VHD, 16 Aug.
In a mere one thousand days, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy created an entrancing public persona that has remained intact for more than a half-century. Even now, long after her death in...