Hoover, Irwin Hood (Ike). Forty-Two Years in the White House. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1934. Jaffray, Elizabeth. Secrets of the White House. New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corp., 1927. Kane,Joseph Nathan. Presidential Fact Book.
Hambly, The Emancipator's Wife, 217, 591, 229. 50. Irving Stone, Love Is Eternal: A Novel about Mary Todd andAbraham Lincoln (New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell, 1954), 80–81. 51. Hambly, The Emancipator's Wife, 454, 587. 52.
With the aid of her grandmother, President's daughter Jocelyn Wakefield is occassionally able to escape the White House, but her efforts to achieve anonymity may come to naught after she meets political columnist Grady Tucker.
Abraham Lincoln never slept here. The hotel, which opened in 1930, is named for the nation's 16th president because his greatgrandfather lived nearby. Music fans and marines will be interested to know that John Philip Sousa, ...
The Eye That Never Sleeps is illustrated with a contemporary cartoon style, mixing art and text in a way that appeals to readers of all ages. The book also includes a bibliography and a timeline.
From his hospital bed Lincoln Rhyme could see a park on the grounds of the University Medical Center in Avery. Lush trees, a sidewalk meandering through a rich, green lawn, a stone fountain that a nurse had told him was a replica of ...
Since everyone liked him, he never had any trouble finding a place to stay. Almost any villager could have posted a sign, “Abe Lincoln slept here.” Lincoln frequently visited Armstrong's home where Jack's wife, Hannah, “took a likin'” ...
3. Carman and Luthin , 28–29 ; WHH to Horace White , Springfield , February 13 , 1891 , James G. Randall Papers , Library of Congress . 4. Browne , 413-14 . 5. Ibid .; Basler , 4 : 271 ( from AĽs First Inaugural Address ) . 6.
Miscellaneous National Park Measures: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Public Lands, National Parks, and Forests of the Committee on Energy...
ROBERT TODD LINCOLN'S BIG FLUNK When Abraham Lincoln's son, Robert. George Washington never slept here, but he did stop for breakfast on the morning of November 4, 1789, on a visit that was not related to a presidential primary.