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  1. Martha Washington’s world expanded immeasurably during the Revolutionary War, which she strongly supported.Suddenly, after having lived her entire life in Virginia, now in her mid-40s she found herself traveling to other parts of the country for all eight years of the war, to spend time with Washington at his winter quarters.

  2. Martha Dandridge Custis Washington, ( Condado de New Kent, 2 de junio de 1731- Mount Vernon, 22 de mayo de 1802) fue la esposa de George Washington y pionera en cuanto a ser primera dama de los Estados Unidos, al serlo entre los años 1789 y 1797. Datos rápidos 1.a primera dama de los Estados Unidos, Presidente ...

  3. Martha Washington. The creator of this 19th Century (ca. 1800-1825) portrait of Martha Washington is unknown. It is based on earlier works by famed artists Charles Wilson Peale and Gilbert Stuart. In 1633, the Reverend Rowland Jones immigrated from England to the colony of Virginia. He had graduated from Oxford University and in Williamsburg ...

  4. 1 de jan. de 2022 · Her death came in spite of Martha and Washington’s hard-fought effort to cure Patsy of her epilepsy. As the Revolutionary War wound to an end, Martha and George Washington’s lives were rocked by the death of her son John, who died of a severe “camp fever” at Yorktown on November 5, 1781.

  5. 3 de jun. de 2017 · Martha Washington did not enjoy her time (1789-1797) as First Lady (the term was not then used) though she played her role as hostess with dignity. She had not supported her husband's candidacy for the presidency, and she would not attend his inauguration.

  6. Martha Washington, foi criada por Miller e Gibbons entre os anos de 1988 e 1989, e publicada pela primeira vez em 1990 na minissérie “Grito de Liberdade”, da editora Dark Horse, e no Brasil, foi publicada pela Editora Globo como “Liberdade” em 1992.

  7. Martha Dandridge Custis Washington was born June 2, 1731 and died May 22, 1802. She was the wife of George Washington, the first Commander-in-Chief of the United Colonies and States of America. "Lady Washington" is incorrectly considered, as opposed to Dorothy Hancock (wife of President John Hancock), to be the first United States “First Lady".