Julia Gardiner Tyler began life as a prototype of the self-centered, somewhat spoiled, wealthy young woman of her era.;Becoming first lady at the age of 24 to the recently widowed president John Tyler, she brought not only zest.
John E. Craven, who has served the CIA from 1968 to the present 12. James H. Critchfield, who served the CIA from 1948 to ... Paul L. Howe, who served the CIA from 1956 to 1987 Fitzgerald, Desmond 99 26. SHERMAN KENT, who served the CIA.
After the nation had gone through the upheaval of World War I and a tumultuous economic shift from farms to factories, Americans wanted a "return to normalcy."
Though she avoids controversy and almost never speaks out on hot-button issues, Laura Welch Bush ranks herself as a feminist, expressing the hope that someday in the not-too-distant future a woman will serve as president of the.
Abigail Adams's ambition was matched by that of her husband, John Adams. She wanted him to exercise his abilities to the fullest, and also to give her the opportunity to exercise hers.
Raised to be a southern belle and a plantation mistress, Martha Washington delighted in domesticity and would've been content as, in her words, an "old fashioned Virginia house-keeper." Yet when duty called her husband George,
A woman in tune with her class and times, Barbara Pierce Bush lived happily, married a man of similar background, had children, and helped her husband George H.W.
Margaret Taylor, wife of general, war hero, and president Zachary Taylor, was once described as "a most kind and thorough-bred Southern lady." Although this description is apt, it doesn't take into account the strength she poss.
Zachary Taylor once described Dolley Madison as "our First Lady for a half-century." Generous, warmhearted, and amiable, she would become the ultimate hostess, rejoicing;in the political and social worlds to which her second ma.
During a time when;women were expected to confine themselves to the domestic sphere and find fulfillment in service to others, Sarah Polk put her own ambitions, high intelligence, and political sophistication to the service of.
Abigail Fillmore was a self-made woman who married Millard Fillmore, a self-made man. Both of them trusted in the power of education, struggled to achieve it for themselves, and worked to make it available to others.