First Lady of the United States is the unofficial title of the hostess of the
White House. The position is traditionally filled by the wife of the
President of the United States of America, and the title is sometimes taken to apply only to the wife of a sitting president. The current First Lady is
Laura Welch Bush. Some of the more notable former First Ladies include
Martha Washington,
Dolley Madison,
Eleanor Roosevelt, and
Hillary Clinton.
Several women, other than wives of presidents, have been recognized as being a "First Lady". This situation has arisen due to the President being a bachelor or widower, when the position was then filled by a female relative or friend of the President. Less commonly, the First Lady has delagated her duties to another woman when she is unable or unwilling to fulfill them herself.
The title was used as early as 1849 when Dolley Madison was eulogized as "America's First Lady", but did not gain wider recognition until 1877 when newspaper journalist Mary Clemmer Ames[?] used it while reporting on the inauguration of Rutherford B. Hayes.
The First Lady is not an elected position, carries no official duties, and brings no salary. Nonetheless, she attends many official ceremonies and functions of state either along with or in place of the President. Furthermore, many have taken an active role in campaigning for the President they are associated with. Hillary Rodham Clinton took the role one step further when she was, for a time, given a formal job in the Clinton administration to develop reforms to the health care system.
If the United States were to have a female President, it is not clear who would take the position of First Lady. A female president could act as her own First Lady, select a female relative or friend to occupy the role, or have her husband act as an analogous "First Gentleman".
The wife of the president is referred to by her married name - the couple is formally referred to as, for example, "The President and Mrs. Washington."
The term is also used to describe the wife of other government officials, or for a woman who has acted as a leading symbol for some activity (as in "First Lady of California" or "First Lady of Jazz" respectively).
First Ladies of the United States
The following women have been recognized by The National First Ladies' Library as "First Lady".
- Martha Dandridge Custis Washington - wife of George Washington
- Abigail Smith Adams[?] - wife of John Adams
- Martha Jefferson Randolph[?] - daughter of widower Thomas Jefferson
- Dolley Payne Todd Madison - friend of widower Thomas Jefferson
- Dolley Payne Todd Madison - wife of James Madison
- Elizabeth Kortwright Monroe[?] - wife of James Monroe
- Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams[?] - wife of John Quincy Adams
- Emily Tennessee Donelson[?] - niece of widower Andrew Jackson
- Sarah Yorke Jackson[?] - daughter-in-law of widower Andrew Jackson
- Angelica Singleton Van Buren[?] - daughter-in-law of widower Martin Van Buren
- Anna Tuthill Symmes Harrison[?] - absent wife of short-termed William Henry Harrison
- Jane Irwin Harrison[?] - daughter-in-law of short-termed William Henry Harrison
- Letitia Christian Tyler[?] - wife of John Tyler
- Priscilla Cooper Tyler[?] - daughter-in-law of widower John Tyler
- Julia Gardiner Tyler[?] - second wife of John Tyler
- Sarah Childress Polk[?] - wife of James Knox Polk
- Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor[?] - wife of Zachary Taylor
- Abigail Powers Fillmore[?] - wife of Millard Fillmore
- Jane Means Appleton Pierce[?] - wife of Franklin Pierce
- Harriet Rebecca Lane [?] - niece of bachelor James Buchanan
- Mary Todd Lincoln[?] - wife of Abraham Lincoln
- Eliza McCardle Johnson[?] - wife of Andrew Johnson
- Julia Dent Grant[?] - wife of Ulysses S. Grant
- Lucy Ware Webb Hayes - wife of Rutherford B. Hayes
- Lucretia Rudolph Garfield[?] - wife of James A. Garfield
- Mary Arthur McElroy[?] - sister of widower Chester Alan Arthur
- Rose Elizabeth Cleveland[?] - sister of bachelor Grover Cleveland
- Frances Folsom Cleveland[?] - wife of Grover Cleveland
- Caroline Levina Scott Harrison[?] - wife of Benjamin Harrison
- Mary Harrison McKee[?] - daughter of widower Benjamin Harrison
- Frances Folsom Cleveland[?] - wife of Grover Cleveland
- Ida Saxton McKinley[?] - wife of William McKinley
- Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt[?] - second wife of Theodore Roosevelt
- Helen Herron Taft[?] - wife of William Howard Taft
- Ellen Louise Axson Wilson[?] - wife of Woodrow Wilson
- Edith Bolling Galt Wilson[?] - second wife of Woodrow Wilson
- Florence Kling Harding[?] - wife of Warren G. Harding
- Grace Anna Goodhue Coolidge[?] - wife of Calvin Coolidge
- Lou Henry Hoover[?] - wife of Herbert Hoover
- Anna Eleanor Roosevelt - wife of Franklin Delano Roosevelt
- Elizabeth Virginia Wallace Truman[?] - wife of Harry S. Truman
- Mary "Mamie" Geneva Doud Eisenhower[?] - wife of Dwight D. Eisenhower
- Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy - wife of John F. Kennedy
- Claudia Alta Taylor "Lady Bird" Johnson - wife of Lyndon B. Johnson
- Thelma "Patricia" Ryan Nixon[?] - wife of Richard Milhous Nixon
- Elizabeth Bloomer Ford[?] - wife of Gerald R. Ford
- Rosalynn Smith Carter - wife of Jimmy Carter
- Nancy Davis Reagan - second wife of Ronald Reagan
- Barbara Pierce Bush - wife of George H. Bush
- Hillary Rodham Clinton - wife of Bill Clinton
- Laura Welch Bush - wife of George W. Bush
The following women are known to have acted as hostess on behalf of the First Lady when she was otherwise unable or unwilling.
- Maria Jefferson Eppes[?] - daughter of widower Thomas Jefferson
- Eliza Monroe Hay[?] - daughter of James Monroe
- Letitia Tyler Semple[?] - daughter of widower John Tyler
- Mary Elizabeth Taylor Bliss[?] - daughter of Zachary Taylor
- Mary Abigail Fillmore[?] - daughter of Millard Fillmore
- Martha Johnson Patterson[?] - daughter of Andrew Johnson
- Helen Taft Manning[?] - daughter of William Howard Taft
- Margaret Woodrow Wilson[?] - daughter of widower Woodrow Wilson
- Helen Woodrow Bones[?] - cousin of widower Woodrow Wilson
- Chelsea Victoria Clinton - daughter of William J. Clinton
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