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  1. Elizabeth Kortright Monroe served as First Lady of the United States from 1817 to 1825 as the wife of the fifth President, James Monroe. Romance glints from the little that is known about ...

  2. Maria Monroe Gouverneur (1802-1850), Monroe’s youngest child, was born on April 8, 1802. She attended Madame Grelaud’s School in Philadelphia from 1816-1819, and married her cousin Samuel L. Gouverneur ( 1798 – 1865) in a ceremony at the White House in 1820. They resided in New York until 1844, when they returned to Washington, D. C., to ...

  3. James Spence Monroe (1799-1800), the second of the Monroe children, only lived to be 16 months old. His death left the family devastated. He is buried in Richmond. “I was balancing for some time what I should call him, and among the worthies of our country …. I should have thought more of the names of Jefferson & Montgomery than any we ...

  4. Monroe, Eliza Kortright (1786–1840)American first daughter. Name variations: Eliza Monroe Hay. Born Dec 5, 1786 (some sources cite 1787) in Fredericksburg, VA; died 1840 in Paris, France; buried in Pere LaChaise Cemetery, Paris; dau. of James Monroe (1758–1831, 5th US president) and Elizabeth (Kortright) Monroe (1768–1830); sister of Maria Hester Monroe (1803–1850); m.

  5. Monroe writes to George Hay about James Madison and Albert Gallatin visiting Thomas Jefferson, his displeasure with government policy, and contemplates re-entering national politics, 1809; expresses concern for Eliza's health, and mentions selling a slave, 1810; making arrangements for his brother, Joseph Monroe, to move to another farm, 1826; health of Eliza, his wife Elizabeth, and himself ...

  6. Monroe writes to George Hay about James Madison and Albert Gallatin visiting Thomas Jefferson, his displeasure with government policy, and contemplates re-entering national politics, 1809; expresses concern for Eliza's health, and mentions selling a slave, 1810; making arrangements for his brother, Joseph Monroe, to move to another farm, 1826; health of Eliza, his wife Elizabeth, and himself ...

  7. The Eliza Project. To fulfill these goals, help is needed. This project envisions a three-part program: –Exhumation and repatriation of the remains of Eliza Monroe Hay.. Beginning with the exhumation of the remains from Pere Lachaise in Paris, followed by the flight from Paris to Washington, DC, and concluding with the reinternment of her remains in the James Monroe family plot in Hollywood ...