Valdosta Daily Times

Local News

February 15, 2010

First Ladies: The Times starts new American series in today’s edition

We tend to forget that the American presidency has made widows of almost a fifth of our nation’s first ladies.

First lady often brings to mind a sense of glamour. Take Michelle Obama, for example. Much media coverage has focused on her fashion sense, her social style, her ability to balance the duties of first lady with those of being a mother to two small daughters.

From Dolley Madison to Jacqueline Kennedy to Nancy Reagan, first ladies have been paragons of style. Or like Abigail Adams, Edith Wilson or Eleanor Roosevelt, they have been symbols of strength either to the public, to their presidential husbands, and, in many cases, both.

Yet they have also been tragic symbols. From assassins’ bullets to illness, eight presidents have died in office, leaving their wives to trade the title of first lady for widow.

Meanwhile, other first ladies felt widowed by their husbands’ political careers. Or the loss of privacy, or suffered the snubbing of D.C. society, or felt demonized by the press or presidential staff. Or they mourned the loss of children during their presidential years.

And some presidential wives did not live long enough to ever become first ladies. Some of our presidents took the office as widowers, their wives having died years before the presidency.

During the next several weeks, The Valdosta Daily Times will look at the lives of America’s first ladies.

To mark Presidents Day, The Times starts the series today with Martha Washington. Each day will spotlight a different first lady from Martha Washington to Michelle Obama.

The first ladies series follows The Times’ tradition of past profiles on the American Presidents and each of the 50 states.

Chronicling the first ladies is not a simple course. As noted, many of the earlier presidential wives were dead by the time their husbands became president. Daughters, nieces and, in some cases, the wives or family of friends served as these presidents’ official hostesses. Still, our profiles focus on the presidents’ wives.

Yet, even that determination has its anomalies.

John Tyler, for example, became the first sitting vice president to become president upon the death of President William Henry Harrison. Tyler had a wife when he took office, but few historians list Letitia Tyler as a first lady because she had suffered a debilitating stroke prior to the presidency and she died during his abbreviated one term. However, most list Tyler’s second wife whom he married while still in office. The young, vivacious Julia Tyler is typically given the distinction of being President Tyler’s first lady. Our series does not profile Letitia Tyler, but does count her in the numbered listings.

Woodrow Wilson also had two wives during his presidency. First wife Ellen Wilson died during his first term. Wilson remarried while still in office, making Edith Wilson his second first lady. Historians count both Ellen and Edith as first ladies, so we profile both of them.

President James Buchanan never married. His niece, Harriet Lane, served as his first lady. Given Buchanan’s lifelong bachelor status, we profile Lane as a first lady.

Thomas Jefferson’s first lady prompted some discussion for our list. His wife, Martha, died before he became president. His daughter, Martha, served as his official hostess. Still, keeping with our theme, we profiled Martha the wife even though there is no known portrait of her. While the rest of the profiles include portraits and caricatures of each first lady, Martha Jefferson’s includes a cameo profile based on an image often displayed for her.

Frances Cleveland has the distinction of being first lady twice. She married Grover Cleveland while he served his first presidential term. Cleveland is the president who is counted twice because he is the only president who served two non-consecutive terms. We let Frances Cleveland keep the double count but our series only profiles her once.

The Valdosta Daily Times believes you will discover many unexpected stories and details about the extraordinary women who have served as our nation’s first ladies in the weeks to come.

The stories of the first ladies are tragic and funny, romantic and inspiring, and, most of all, the stories of the first ladies are chapters in the American story from the past to the present.

Text Only
Local News
  • 120206 Berrien Sherrie WIlliams.jpg Berrien clinic director loses job

    Speaking to The Valdosta Daily Times about the possible discontinuation of the Berrien Elementary School MED Clinic led to the program’s executive director losing her job Monday morning.

    February 7, 2012 1 Photo

  • 120201 pruden AR1.jpg From the CIA to man about town

    Meet Jack Pruden, former member of the Central Intelligence Agency.

    February 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • schoolnurse.jpg Berrien school medical facility faces an uncertain future

    A state-of-the-art medical facility that was introduced in Berrien County public schools in 2010 might be ending soon.

    February 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • tv listings.jpg New TV listings section debuts in print edition

    In Sunday editions of The Valdosta Daily Times, keep an eye out for the updated TV listings section.

    February 5, 2012 1 Photo

  • police-lights-backgrounds-for-powerpoint.jpg Man shot in Valdosta; police car, ambulance collide

    Response to a shooting Saturday afternoon led to a collision between a police vehicle and an ambulance.

    February 5, 2012 1 Photo

  • 120203 FD Dance 2.jpg Annual Father-Daughter Dance enters 16th year

    Three-week-old Emmaline Taylor lay contentedly on dad Trey Taylor’s shoulder Friday night, completely oblivious to the sights and sounds of the Father-Daughter Valentine Dance.
    Now in its 16th year, the popular annual event is sponsored by Valdosta’s First Presbyterian Church and held at the James H. Rainwater Conference Center.
    “We’ve been looking forward to this,” Trey Taylor said. “When we first got pregnant, (my wife Sheya and I) looked to see if she would be here in time for the Father-Daughter Dance.”

    February 4, 2012 1 Photo

  • ticket.jpg VPD offers online citation payment

    The Valdosta Police Department has implemented a new online service to assist traffic violators.

    February 4, 2012 1 Photo

  • school.jpg School system grades policy gets national exposure

    Local radio personality Scott James of Talk 92.1 will be appearing on “Fox & Friends” today at 7:45 a.m. to share feedback about the new grading policy implemented by the Lowndes County School System.

    February 4, 2012 1 Photo

  • 120201 vsu opera5.jpg Don Giovanni: VSU presents Mozart’s most famous opera


    VALDOSTA — Editing Mozart isn’t for sissies.
    It takes a certain knowledge, talent and sheer chutzpah to perform surgery on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Alas, in our age of short-attention spans, it is a challenge which many opera productions must consider, given that many of Mozart’s originals stretched as long as four hours.

    February 3, 2012 4 Photos

  • Traffic Unit coming to Hahira

    HAHIRA — The Hahira City Council voted to allow the addition of a Traffic Enforcement Unit to the Hahira Police Department at Thursday night’s regular session council meeting.
    The Traffic Enforcement Unit will patrol two miles of Interstate 75 and according to Hahira Police Chief Terry Davis, has nothing to do with making money and everything to do with the safety of Hahira’s citizens.

    February 3, 2012

Business Marquee
Top Local News
House Ads
SmugMug

VDT Photos of the Week

AP Video
Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day Raw Video: Giants Celebrate Another Super Bowl Cab Driver Helps Wis. Family Escape House Fire Greek Leaders Seek Deal As Bankruptcy Looms Bernanke: Recovery Depends on Consumer Spending Staff Removed at LA School During Abuse Probe Eastwood in Super Bowl Ad 'Compassionate' Stranded Fishermen Rescued From Bay of Green Bay Analyst: Outside Troops Won't Intervene in Syria Police: Father Planned Deadly Fire for Some Time US, UK Pressure on Syria; More Homs Violence Raw Video: Mass Killer Wants Medal, Freedom Court Strips Contador of Tour De France Title Runaway Goat Leads Police on Wild Chase And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Romney Latest Poll to Join Let-me-explain Club
Choose your subscription:
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Weather Radar
Seasonal Content
Poll

Do you think sugar is:

A toxic substance?
An addictive substance?
Sweet goodness?
     View Results