Fascinating Facts About Every First Lady
As highly visible but unelected members of the U.S. executive branch, America’s first ladies occupy a singular place in the firmament of public figures. Most have capably satisfied the requirements of supporting the president, hosting official affairs, and (more recently) advocating for charitable causes, but the sheer number of participants has resulted in a wild divergence of characters to play the part.
Some first ladies were born outside the country, others enjoyed prominent careers before the White House, and a fair share weren’t actually married to the person calling the shots in the Oval Office. Some also only held the role temporarily, which is why the total number of first ladies outnumbers the 45 men who have served as commander in chief. Here are 57 facts to illuminate the lives of the 57 women who have served as first lady.
Martha Washington
George Washington never lived in the White House, but Martha Washington did; that was, coincidentally, the name of the Virginia plantation she inherited after her first husband, Daniel Parke Custis, died in 1757.
Abigail Adams
Said to be the first recorded female investor in the U.S., Abigail Adams shrewdly funneled the family finances toward government bonds and securities while her husband, John Adams, was serving his pre-presidency ambassadorships in France, the Netherlands, and Great Britain.
Martha Jefferson Randolph
Martha Jefferson Randolph served as acting first lady to her father, President Thomas Jefferson, two decades after the death of her mother, Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson. In early 1806, Randolph gave birth to the first child born in the Executive Mansion, a boy named James Madison Randolph.