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Cover image for Dear First Lady : letters to the White House : from the collections of the Library of Congress & National Archives
Dear First Lady : letters to the White House : from the collections of the Library of Congress & National Archives
Title:
Dear First Lady : letters to the White House : from the collections of the Library of Congress & National Archives
ISBN:
9781426205897
Publication Information:
Washington, D.C. : National Geographic, 2009, ©2008.
Physical Description:
207 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 27 cm
Contents:
John Trumbull to Martha Washington -- A. St. Mary to Martha Washington -- John Adams to Abigail Adams -- Thomas Jefferson to Abigail Adams -- Dolley Madison to Anna Cutts -- A.D. and N.D. Dearborn to Jane Pierce -- Jane Pierce to Benny Pierce -- Wingematub to Harriet Lane -- Helen M. Rauschnabel to Mary Todd Lincoln -- Mary Todd Lincoln to Abraham Lincoln -- Abraham Lincoln to Mary Todd Lincoln -- Queen Victoria to Mary Todd Lincoln -- Jonathan French to Eliza Johnson -- Julia Grant to Ulysses S. Grant -- Mrs. E.C. Sloan to Lucretia Garfield -- Mrs. M.A. McMaster to Lucretia Garfield -- A.F. Rockwell to Lucretia Garfield -- Moses Hunt to Lucretia Garfield -- Howard Carter to Caroline Harrison -- Mrs. G.H. Cleveland to Frances Cleveland -- Sally Walker Boor to Frances Cleveland -- Frances Cleveland to H.T. Thurber -- Mrs. Susan Wolfskill to Ida McKinley -- Various writers to Ida McKinley -- Edith Roosevelt to Charles F. McKim -- Kermit Roosevelt to Edith Roosevelt -- Whitelaw Reid to Edith Roosevelt -- Helen Taft to William Howard Taft -- Mrs. Pincus Schein to Helen Taft -- Helen Taft to Madame Yukio Ozaki -- A temperate printer to Ellen Wilson -- Edith E. Wood to Ellen Wilson -- Woodrow Wilson to Edith Wilson -- May Gonzalez to Franklin K. Lane -- Franklin K. Lane to Edith Wilson -- Joseph P. Tumulty to Edith Wilson -- Florence Harding to Evalyn McLean -- Syngman Rhee to Grace Coolidge -- The Women's League of Miami Florida to Lou Hoover -- A.E. Bruce to Lou Hoover -- Students to Lou Hoover.

Pearl N. Schmitt to Lou Hoover -- Lou Hoover to Grace Coolidge -- FDR to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Lorena Hickok to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Clara Leonard to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Mrs. H. Goldfarb to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Eleanor Roosevelt to Mrs. Henry M. Robert, Jr. -- Pearl S. Buck to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Pvt. Clifton Searles to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Eleanor Roosevelt to Pvt. Clifton Searles -- Jeff Davis to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Francis Jackson to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Lorena Hickok to Eleanor Roosevelt -- Harry Truman to Bess Truman -- Elizabeth Arden to Mamie Eisenhower -- Sophie Rosenberg to Mamie Eisenhower -- Julie and Patricia Nixon to Mamie Eisenhower -- Michele Timmons to Jacqueline Kennedy -- Arthur Schlesinger Jr. to Jacqueline Kennedy -- Bernard Boutin to Jacqueline Kennedy -- Lyndon B. Johnson to Jacqueline Kennedy -- Lady Bird Johnson to Lyndon B. Johnson -- Jacque McKone to Lady Bird Johnson -- Merrick School Mothers Club to Lady Bird Johnson -- Auto Dismantlers Association to Lady Bird Johnson -- Gena Geedy to Lady Bird Johnson -- Bessie Mae Hicks to Lady Bird Johnson -- Pat Nixon to Mrs. Alicia Marrero -- Betty Ford to Betty Ford -- Maria von Trapp to Betty Ford -- Richard Nixon to Betty Ford -- Roxie Lee McCarty to Betty Ford -- Patrick H. Caddell to Rosalynn Carter -- Victoria Schmitt to Nancy Reagan -- Ronald Reagan to Nancy Reagan -- Margaret Shozda to Nancy Reagan -- Tasha to Millie Bush -- DEA Agent's wife to Barbara Bush -- Marge Simpson to Barbara Bush -- Dalai Lama to Hillary Clinton -- Eppie Lederer to Hillary Clinton -- Laura Bush to Children -- Deborah Butryn to Laura Bush.
Summary:
Young and Johnson provide a glimpse into America's political and social history through letters received and written by the presidents' wives. Images of original correspondences appear opposite narratives that provide accessible historical context. Additional drawings and photographs enhance the visual experience. The letters range in content from politically significant to personally insightful. Dolley Madison describes her famed 1814 flight from the White House during the War of 1812 and dramatic rescue of Washington's portrait to her sister. Queen Victoria comforts Mary Todd Lincoln after her husband's assassination. Jane Pierce writes elaborate messages to her dead son, revealing the fragility of her grief-stricken mind. Sometimes, the letters provide an opportunity to notice contradictions present in these famous women. Eleanor Roosevelt denounces the racial discrimination practiced by the Daughters of the American Revolution, and on the next page makes excuses for the policy of Japanese Internment. What emerges is not only a portrait of the privilege and power of these women, but also a palpable sense of their humanity. A few of the letters are neither politically nor personally significant and one wonders why they were included. The occasional triviality of the subject matter, as well as the book's lack of index, make it an enjoyable example of anecdotal history rather than a source for serious research. While the original documents give the book an appealing primary-source quality, the handwritten words are often hard to decipher. The authors provide transcriptions for selected letters at the back of the book.
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