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  1. Mary Johnson Stover (May 8, 1832 – April 19, 1883) was a daughter of 17th U.S. President Andrew Johnson and his wife Eliza McCardle. Stover and her three children lived at the White House during the Johnson administration, as Stover's husband, a soldier in the Union Army, had died during the American Civil War and their East ...

  2. Mary Johnson Stover . NPS Image. Mary Johnson (Stover) Mary Johnson was born May 8, 1832. More lighthearted than her older sister Martha, Mary attended the Oddfellow's School in Rogersville, TN. On April 7, 1852, she married Daniel Stover from Carter County and moved to his farm there.

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  3. Mary Johnson Stover monument . An NPS Photo. Mary Johnson Stover . Mary Johnson Stover was laid to rest in the family in 1883. She and her first husband, Daniel Stover, had three children, Sarah, Lillie, and Andrew Johnson Stover. They lived in Carter County, TN.

  4. American first daughter. Name variations: Mary Johnson Brown. Born Mary Johnson in 1832; died 1883; dau. of Eliza McCardle Johnson (1810–1876) and Andrew Johnson (1808–1875, 17th president of US, 1865–69); sister of Martha Johnson Patterson (1828–1901); m. Daniel Stover (1826–1864, colonel killed in Civil War ); m.

  5. 22 de nov. de 2022 · Daughter of Andrew Johnson, 17th President of the USA; Andrew Johnson and Eliza Johnson, First Lady Wife of Col. Daniel Stover; William Ramsey Brown and Col. Daniel Stover, USA Mother of Andrew Johnson Stover; Lilly Mae Maloney; Eliza Johnson Stover and Sarah Drake Bachman Sister of Martha Patterson; Charles Johnson, MD, USA; Brig ...

    • "stover", "brown"
    • Greeneville, Greene, Tennessee, USA
    • circa May 08, 1832
  6. Biography. Born in Carter County, Tennessee, Stover married Andrew Johnson's younger daughter Mary Johnson in 1852. Stover had a "fine plantation" in the Watauga Valley. [1] . In 1860, on the cusp of the Civil War, the family was living together in Carter County.

  7. 5 de mar. de 2020 · “Andrew Johnson to Mary Stover,” Andrew Johnson Papers, Box 1, Folder 3, Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville, Tennessee. According to census data, by 1875, Liz had married George Forbey, a local farmer and formerly enslaved laborer, and the two had nine children together.