Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 4076. Source citation. Presidential First Lady. She was born Elizabeth Kortright Eliza in New York City to a father who was a Loyalist officer serving in the British Army. She met the future President James Monroe when he was a United States Representative and the Capitol of the nation was in New York City.

  2. 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 ...

  3. Eliza Monroe. He said that he did not think that my information on its location was correct. He kindly brought out the plot book of the gravesites, indicated by number, in the American section. In comparing the location of the collapsed tomb and the location of the tomb of Eliza Monroe Hay, we discovered that the previous identification of the

  4. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › elizabeth-monroeElizabeth Monroe _ AcademiaLab

    Monroe vendió su plantación, Highland en el condado de Albemarle, para pagar deudas, y ambos se retiraron a Oak Hill en el condado de Loudoun, más cerca de Washington, D.C., y su hija Eliza y su esposo (aunque los Hay se mudaron a Richmond en 1825 cuando se convirtió en el distrito estadounidense).

  5. 18 de abr. de 2024 · A recent review of a previously unknown manuscript has prompted a reconsideration of earlier scholarship regarding the birthplace of Eliza Monroe Hay. Her birth in early December 1786 had originally been understood to have occurred in Fredericksburg, but evidence now supports that she was instead born in King George County, likely at the farm of James Monroe’s maternal uncle, Judge Joseph Jones.

  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. 9 de jun. de 2023 · When Maria Monroe and Samuel Gouverneur were married on March 9, 1820, the nation’s capital was still recovering from the destruction of the War of 1812. Maria’s eldest sister, Eliza Monroe Hay, planned the ceremony and invited only close friends and family.