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  1. Eliza Johnson (née McCardle; October 4, 1810 – January 15, 1876) was the first lady of the United States from 1865 to 1869 as the wife of President Andrew Johnson. She also served as the second lady of the United States March 1865 until April 1865 when her husband was vice president.

  2. Elizabeth McCardle Johnson (Greeneville, Tennessee; 4 de outubro de 1810 — 15 de janeiro de 1876) foi a 18º primeira-dama dos Estados Unidos e a esposa de Andrew Johnson, o 17º presidente dos Estados Unidos.

  3. 25 de abr. de 2024 · Eliza Johnson (born October 4, 1810, Greeneville, Tennessee, U.S.—died January 15, 1876, Greeneville) was an American first lady (1865–69), the wife of Andrew Johnson, 17th president of the United States. Eliza McCardle was the only child of John McCardle, a shoemaker and innkeeper, and Sarah Phillips McCardle.

  4. Eliza McCardle Johnson was the wife of the 17th President, Andrew Johnson. She served as First Lady of the United States from 1865 to 1869. “I knew he’d be acquitted; I knew it,” declared...

  5. Eliza Johnson. 1865-1869. Eliza Johnson (1810­–1876) Born Telford, Tennessee. The daughter of a shoemaker, Eliza McCardle Johnson was sixteen when she married Andrew Johnson, a tailor. Before moving to Washington, D.C., when her husband became Abraham Lincoln’s vice president in 1864, she managed their small family shop in Greeneville, Tennessee.

  6. First Lady Biography: Eliza Johnson . Eliza McCardle Johnson . Birth. Leesburg, Tennessee. 4 October 1810. Ancestry. Scotch-Irish, English, possibly Dutch; little to nothing has been definitively traced about Eliza Johnson’s ancestors because of the lack of any primary information about her parents and their origins.

  7. 2 de ago. de 2023 · Eliza McCardle Johnsons life and her tenure as first lady is a reminder of the repeated challenges faced when working with records of enslavers. Available sources illuminating the lives of enslaved and freed people are sometimes just as scarce as those that explain the life of the enslaver because memories of that past were ...