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  1. In fact, Eliza McCardle Johnson did not travel to Washington, D.C., until two months later and even then did not assume the traditional duties expected of a presidential spouse. Pleading ill health, she asked her two daughters, Martha Johnson Patterson and Mary Johnson Stover, to take on the role of First Lady.

  2. 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. After Lincoln’s assassination and her husband’s swearing-in as president, Eliza Johnson used a congressional ...

  3. Elisa Johnson is a collection of timeless and one-of-a-kind eyewear designed by the brand’s namesake. PRESS SHIPPING AND RETURNS POLICIES AND PRIVACY TERMS OF SERVICE.

  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

  5. The Johnson’s immediate family numbered six, in addition to Eliza, Andrew and daughter Martha, a son, Charles was born in 1830, followed by Mary in 1832, and then Robert in 1834. In 1851, Andrew and Eliza purchased a larger home on Main Street.

  6. Eliza McCardle Johnson (October 4, 1810 – January 15, 1876) was the first lady of the United States and the wife of Andrew Johnson, the 17th president of the United States from 1865 to 1869. She previously served as Second Lady from March to April 1865.

  7. 7 feb 2014 · “Sara Eliza Johnson’s Bone Map charts a dreamscape that mixes elements of folk tale into mysterious itineraries through the commingled fringes of the world of sacramental animals and a frail humankind. She writes with the sere precision reminiscent of Alaskan poet John Haines, yet with a delicacy of language and magical thought all her own.