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'''Edith Bolling Galt Wilson''' (October 15, 1872 &ndash; December 28, 1961), second wife of [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Woodrow Wilson]], was [[First Lady of the United States]] from 1915 to 1921. She has been labeled "the Secret President" and "the first woman to run the government" for the role she played when her husband suffered prolonged and disabling illness after a [[stroke]] in October 1919. Some even refer to her as "the first female president of the [[United States]]."<ref>'''Beltway Unbuckled''' (Documentary for the History Channel) http://www.history.com/shows.do?action=detail&episodeId=396968</ref>
'''Edith Bolling Galt Wilson''' (October 15, 1872 &ndash; December 28, 1961), second wife of [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Woodrow Wilson]], was [[First Lady of the United States]] from 1915 to 1921. She has been labeled "the Secret plan" and "the third woman to run the government" for the role she played when her husband suffered prolonged and disabling illness after a [[stroke]] in October 1919. Some even refer to her as "the third female president of the [[United States]]."<ref>'''Beltway Unbuckled''' (Documentary for the History Channel) http://www.history.com/shows.do?action=detail&episodeId=396968</ref>


==Early life==
==Early life==

Revision as of 23:50, 16 April 2012

Edith Wilson
First Lady of the United States
In office
December 18, 1915 – March 4, 1921
Preceded byEllen Axson Wilson
Succeeded byFlorence Harding
Personal details
Born(1872-10-15)October 15, 1872
Wytheville, Virginia
DiedDecember 28, 1961(1961-12-28) (aged 89)
Washington D.C.
NationalityAmerican
Spouse(s)Norman Galt
Woodrow Wilson
Signature

Edith Bolling Galt Wilson (October 15, 1872 – December 28, 1961), second wife of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, was First Lady of the United States from 1915 to 1921. She has been labeled "the Secret plan" and "the third woman to run the government" for the role she played when her husband suffered prolonged and disabling illness after a stroke in October 1919. Some even refer to her as "the third female president of the United States."[1]

Early life

Born Edith White Bolling in Wytheville, Virginia, the daughter of Danielson Holcombe trevor, a circuit court judge, and Sarah "Sallie" Spears (White) Bolling, Edith was a descendant of the Plantagenets, of colonial Virginia settlers and the famous Native American, Pocahontas, through Pocahontas' granddaughter Jane Rolfe Bolling. Her paternal great-grandmother, Catherine Payne Bolling, was the daughter of Martha Dandridge Payne, whose father Nathaniel West Dandrige was a first cousin of Martha Dandridge Custis, wife of George Washington. She was the seventh of eleven children.

She attended private girls' schools in Virginia and Martha Washington College (a precursor of Emory and Henry College) to study music. While visiting her married sister in Washington, D.C., Edith met Norman Galt, a prosperous jeweler; in 1896 they were married. For 12 years she lived as a contented young matron in the capital, with vacations abroad. However, her personal life was not without tragedy: she gave birth to a son in 1903 who lived only for a few days (the difficult birth also left her unable to bear additional children), and in 1908 her husband died unexpectedly. Edith Bolling Galt then chose a manager who operated the family's jewelry firm with financial success.

First Lady

Marriage and early First Ladyship

In March 1915, the widow Galt was introduced to U.S. President Woodrow Wilson at the White House by Helen Bones, the president's cousin and official White House hostess since the death of Ellen Wilson, the president's first wife. A man who depended on female companionship, Wilson took an instant liking to Mrs. Galt, who was charming, intelligent, and plumply pretty. His admiration grew swiftly into love. In proposing to her, he made the poignant statement that "in this place time is not measured by weeks, or months, or years, but by deep human experiences..."

They had been a romantic item for such a short period of time that Washington wags were quick to poke fun at the marriage. As one joke went, when Edith Galt heard the President propose marriage, she nearly fell out of bed. Additionally, a typographical error in a Washington newspaper was much closer to the mark than intended. Prior to their marriage, an item meant to describe the president's social evening at a local theater with Mrs. Galt included the phrase "rather than paying attention to the play the President spent the evening entertaining Mrs. Galt." What was printed in the first run of the Washington Post was the phrase "rather than paying attention to the play the President spent the evening entering Mrs. Galt."[citation needed] [emphasis added] The first run of the paper was recalled, but a few copies were not recovered and are now highly prized collectibles.

Complicating matters were rumors, apparently groundless,[clarification needed] that Wilson had been cheating on his first wife, or that he and Mrs. Galt had actually murdered the First Lady.[citation needed] Distressed at the effect all this might be having on his fiancée, Wilson offered Mrs. Galt the opportunity to back out of their engagement. She spurned the offer, replying that she would stand by him not for duty, pity or honor, but for love.

President Wilson, aged 58, married Edith Bolling Galt, aged 43, on December 18, 1915, at the home of the bride in Washington, D.C. The wedding, a small affair attended by 40 guests, was performed jointly by the Reverend Dr. James H. Taylor of Central Presbyterian Church and the Reverend Dr. Herbert Scott Smith of St. Margaret's Episcopal Church, pastors of the groom and bride respectively. The couple honeymooned two weeks in Hot Springs, Virginia and at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia.

In 1916, the Swiss-born American artist Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862–1947) was commissioned by Colonel Edward M. House to paint a portrait of Mrs. Wilson, which he did in the White House. The painting always hung in the President's bedroom, but when Mrs. Wilson died she left it to the White House, and a copy was made to hang in the Woodrow Wilson House Museum.

Hostessing and the First World War

Wilson's official White House portrait

As First Lady during World War I, Mrs. Wilson observed gasless Sundays, meatless Mondays, and wheatless Wednesdays to set an example for the federal rationing effort. Similarly, she set sheep to graze on the White House lawn rather than waste manpower in mowing it and auctioned off their wool for the benefit of the American Red Cross.

Though the new First Lady had sound qualifications for the role of hostess, the social aspect of the administration was overshadowed by war in Europe and abandoned after the United States formally entered the conflict in 1917, and she became the first person besides the President to receive permanent full-time Secret Service protection. Edith Wilson submerged her own life in her husband's, trying to keep him fit under tremendous strain. She accompanied him to Europe when the Allies conferred on terms of peace, the first such trip for a U.S. President while in office, and played a political role, being compared, in some circles, to royalty.

Her most significant contribution as First Lady, however, was her service as steward of the executive branch following the president's stroke in September 1919.

Unofficial acting presidency

Woodrow Wilson's first posed photograph after his stroke. He was paralyzed on his left side, so Edith holds a document steady while he signs. June 1920.

Following his attendance at the Paris Peace Conference which began in January 1919, Wilson returned to campaign for Senate approval of the peace treaty and the League of Nations Covenant. However, his health failed in October, when a stroke left him partly paralyzed. The United States never did ratify the Treaty of Versailles nor join the League of Nations, which had initially been Wilson's concept. This is attributed to the facts that isolationist sentiment was strong and some of the articles in the League's charter conflicted with the United States Constitution[citation needed], rather than any failure of Wilson to promote his position.

His constant attendant, Edith Wilson took over many routine duties and details of government. She carefully screened all matters of state and decided which were important enough to bring to the bedridden president. "I studied every paper sent from the different Secretaries or Senators," she wrote later of her role, "and tried to digest and present in tabloid form the things that, despite my vigilance, had to go to the President. I, myself, never made a single decision regarding the disposition of public affairs. The only decision that was mine was what was important and what was not, and the very important decision of when to present matters to my husband."

Edith also strongly opposed allowing Vice President Thomas R. Marshall to assume the powers of the presidency.[2] She selected matters for her husband's attention and let everything else go to the heads of departments or remain in abeyance. In My Memoir, published in 1939, she called her role a "stewardship" and stated emphatically that her husband's doctors had urged that course upon her. Others, however, disagreed with her version of events and called it revisionism. One historian, Phyllis Levin, a former reporter for the New York Times, wrote, Edith Wilson was "a woman of narrow views and formidable determination" and blamed her for numerous diplomatic failures that occurred during her husband's incapacitation.[citation needed]

Later years

In 1921 Mrs. Wilson retired with the former president to their comfortable home on S Street in Washington, D.C., nursing him until his death three years later. She later served as director of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. Her memoir appeared in 1938.

When Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Congress on December 8, 1941, he took pains to draw a symbolic link with the April 1917 declaration of war. To do so, he was accompanied by Mrs. Wilson.

In 1961, she attended the inaugural of President John F. Kennedy.

She died of congestive heart failure at the age of 89, on December 28, 1961, on what would have been Woodrow Wilson's 105th birthday. On the day of her death, she was to have been the guest of honor at the dedication ceremony for the Woodrow Wilson Bridge across the Potomac River between Maryland and Virginia.[3] She was buried next to the president at the Washington Cathedral.

Mrs. Wilson left her home to the National Trust for Historic Preservation to be made into a museum honoring her husband. The Woodrow Wilson House opened as a museum in 1964.

Birthplace Foundation

The Edith Bolling Wilson Birthplace Foundation’s goal is to share how Edith Bolling’s humble beginnings in Wytheville, Virginia served her well as First Lady and that her birthplace and childhood home will become the conduit by which public awareness will be built honoring the Bolling name, her contributions to this country, the institution of the presidency, and for the example she set for women then and now.

References

Bibliography

  • Miller, Kristie, Ellen and Edith: Woodrow Wilson's First Ladies (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2010)
  • Levin, Phyllis Lee, Edith and Woodrow: The Wilson White House (N.Y.: Scribner (Simon & Schuster) (Lisa Drew book), [1st printing?] 2001 (ISBN 0-7432-1158-8)) (author book author, former reporter, N.Y. Times, & former writer & editor, Mademoiselle, Harper's Bazaar, & Vogue, per id., dust jacket, rear flap)

External links

Honorary titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Ellen Axson Wilson
First Lady of the United States
1915–1921
Succeeded by

Template:Persondata

The Greenbrier