45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (2024)

RD.COM Knowledge Facts

45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (1)

ByBrooke Nelson Alexander

Updated: Nov. 20, 2023

    Which first lady flew a plane with Amelia Earhart, or was reported dead by a Beijing newspaper? Keep reading to find out.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (2)

    Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

    Martha Washington’s faced graced our currency

    Mrs. Washington may have been the first First Lady, but she was also the last woman to appear on paper currency in the United States—that is, at least until Harriet Tubman shows up on the $20 bill in 2020. Her face can be found on the $1 banknote in 1886 and 1891, and alongside her husband’s in 1896. Here are some mind-blowing facts about George Washington.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (3)

    via Library of Congress

    Abigail Adams was a trusted adviser to her husband

    Turns out, President John Adams may have had some competition for his job. His wife, Abigail Adams, rarely went by the traditional “Lady Adams;” instead, due to her sharp tongue and vast political knowledge, many referred to her as “Mrs. President.” For more presidential trivia, don’t miss these delightful little-known talents of U.S. Presidents.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (4)

    bauhaus1000/Getty Images

    Martha Jefferson could play it by ear

    Upon their marriage, President Thomas Jefferson bought his new bride a piano for their home, Monticello. One of the couple’s favorite pastimes included playing duets in their parlor, with President Jefferson accompanying his wife on the violin. Can you guess which state has produced the most First Ladies?

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (5)

    via Library of Congress

    Dolley Madison rescued one of our nation’s cultural icons

    An adored socialite, Dolley was the first to make ice cream a regular feature at the end of White House dinners. But Mrs. James Madison proved to be as noble as she was nice. Many remember this first lady for saving a rare painting of George Washington before British troops torched the White House in 1814. Find out more incredible facts about the White House.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (6)

    via Library of Congress

    Elizabeth Monroe was a francophile

    Mrs. James Monroe’s beauty and fashionable appearance earned her the quaint nickname “La Belle Americaine” in France. She later used her prestige to save the life of Adrienne de Lafayette, wife of French revolutionary Marquis de Lafayette, during the French Revolution. Check out the 14 most beautiful inaugural gowns worn by First Ladies.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (7)

    via Library of Congress

    Louisa Adams was a Renaissance woman

    As if being the one of the only first ladies born in a foreign country wasn’t interesting enough (she grew up in London!), John Quincy Adams’ wife practiced a plethora of quirky hobbies: she played the harp, wrote satirical plays, and raised silkworms, to boot. Don’t miss these surprising hidden talents of U.S. presidents.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (8)

    via Library of Congress

    Rachel Jackson was a peace keeper

    Mrs. Jackson held an unusual power over her mischievous husband, Andrew Jackson. It is often said that with a small gesture or word, she was able to shut down his impulsive responses, thus saving many awkward encounters for the brash politician. See the sweet stories of how presidents met their First Ladies.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (9)

    via Library of Congress

    Hannah Van Buren never became first lady

    Mrs. Martin Van Buren passed away in 1819, nearly two decades before her husband was elected president. If she had lived to accompany her husband into the White House, she would have been the first first lady born a U.S. citizen. Don’t miss these U.S. presidential trivia questions almost everyone gets wrong.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (10)

    via Library of Congress

    Anna Harrison made history

    Mrs. Harrison arguably had the shortest career as a first lady ever. In fact, Anna never even saw the inside of the White House; William Henry Harrison passed away just one month after taking office, and Mrs. Harrison was too ill to join him at the residence before his death.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (11)

    via Library of Congress

    Letitia Tyler died in office

    The wife of President John Tyler died of a paralytic stroke having only attended one White House function: the wedding of their daughter, Elizabeth. Sadly, she was the first first lady to die in the White House.

    Julia Tyler was a festive first lady

    President John Tyler’s second wife had a taste for the finer things. Not only did she introduce the polka dance to Washington ballrooms, but she was also known to drive a coach of matching white Arabian horses around the D.C. area.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (13)

    via Library of Congress

    Sarah Polk took her job seriously

    A far cry from her cheery predecessor Julia Tyler, Mrs. James Polk was known among D.C. socialites as “Sahara Sarah” for her ban on hard liquor in the White House. See what otherstrange things presidents have had banned from the White House.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (14)

    Bettmann/Getty Images

    Margaret “Peggy” Taylor was an army wife

    Being a First Lady isn’t always about hosting fancy soirees and wearing expensive dresses. Peggy earned her chops when she learned to shoot a gun while living with her husband, Zachary Taylor, on the Western frontier, one of the many places across America where Taylor was stationed.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (15)

    via Library of Congress

    Abigail Fillmore loved to learn

    A teacher before becoming First Lady, the wife of President Millard Fillmore applied for $2,000 in Congressional funding to create the White House library. Today, it is believed that the library holds over 2million books! See which presidential libraries every history buff needs to add to their bucket list.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (16)

    via Library of Congress

    Jane Pierce was a hesitant host

    Mrs. Pierce was reluctant to become a first lady, to say the least. Before husband Franklin Pierce became president, his wife prayed every night that he would lose the presidential election.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (17)

    Apic/Getty Images

    Mary Todd Lincoln was Abe’s opposite

    The famous (and oft overused) saying “opposites attract” may well have started with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln. While Abraham was 6’4″, Mary was only 5’2”. Learn the timeless Abraham Lincoln quotes everyone should know.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (18)

    via Library of Congress

    Eliza Johnson cherished her cows

    Born in Tennessee, Mrs. Andrew Johnson was determined not to trade her southern roots for east coast pomp when the couple moved to Washington. Instead, the first lady brought cows to the White House; on any given day, they could be found grazing on the front lawn.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (19)

    Kean Collection/Getty Images

    Julia Grant saved her husband’s life

    The Grants were invited to join the Lincolns at Ford Theater on the night of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. However, Mrs. Grant was suspicious of the man who delivered their invitation, so she convinced her husband to to visit their children in New York instead. Don’t miss these clever Secret Service code names for U.S. presidents.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (20)

    Epics/Getty Images

    Lucy Hayes started the Easter Egg roll

    When children living in D.C. were forbidden to roll Easter eggs on the Capitol grounds, Lucy Hayes permitted them to use the White House lawn instead, and the traditional White House Easter Egg Roll was born. However, Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes was not all fun and games; this first lady also forbade any alcoholic beverages to be served at the White House during her husband’s administration, earning her the nickname “Lemonade Lucy.”

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (21)

    Epics/Getty Images

    Lucretia Garfield was an active feminist

    Famous for er independent streak, Mrs. Garfield once wrote an essay for her college’s magazine in favor of equal pay for women. Decades later, the first lady reignited her activism, demanding that the female physician who attended to the dying President James Garfield be paid an amount equal to that of male physicians. Thesequotes from women’s suffrage crusaders are incredibly inspiring.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (22)

    via Library of Congress

    Ellen “Nell” Arthur was an accomplished songbird

    Although she never technically became First Lady (she passed away before her husband took office), the late Mrs. Chester A. Arthur was once a well-known soprano singer and even performed with an all-male glee club.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (23)

    via Library of Congress

    Frances Cleveland had a baby in the White House

    At the tender age of 21, Grover Cleveland’s wife holds the record for being the youngest First Lady and the only bride of an incumbent president to marry—and give birth!—in the White House. Another record she holds? She is the only First Lady whose husband served as president for two non-consecutive terms. Grover Cleveland was both our 22nd and 24th president!

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (24)

    via Library of Congress

    Caroline Harrison started a tradition

    Mrs. Benjamin Harrison is celebrated for winning female students’ admission to John Hopkins University in 1892. However, many have forgotten that she also established the tradition of choosing special White House dinnerware. A different pattern has been selected by each First Lady ever since.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (25)

    via Library of Congress

    Ida McKinley crocheted for charities

    While Mrs. William McKinley was ill and bed-ridden during her husband’s presidency, she crocheted over 3,500 slippers for various charities. The slippers came in two colors: confederate gray and union blue.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (26)

    via Library of Congress

    Edith Roosevelt was good-natured

    Despite not being a booze enthusiast herself, Mrs. Roosevelt was against Prohibition and always requested that co*cktails be served at her parties in the White House. Pair some co*cktails with one of these favorite recipes from First Ladies.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (27)

    via Library of Congress

    Helen “Nellie” Taft is responsible for the capital’s cherry blossoms

    Meet the mother of the Japanese cherry blossoms in Washington, D.C. After the first lady visited Japan in 1912 with her husband, William Howard Taft, the mayor of Tokyo sent her 3,000 cherry tree saplings, which are the ancestors of the beauties that bloom across the nation’s capital each spring to this day.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (28)

    via Library of Congress

    Edith Wilson was an avid motorist

    A direct descendant of Pocahontas, Mrs. Woodrow Wilson inherited her ancestor’s adventurous flair. Before marrying Woodrow, the independent First Lady bought her own car and was often seen driving around Washington, D.C. Check out these unlikely jobs U.S. presidents held after leaving the White House.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (29)

    via Library of Congress

    Florence Harding mixed a mean co*cktail

    When she wasn’t selecting dainty silverware or arranging prestigious dinners, Mrs. Warren G. Harding served as White House bartender for her husband’s poker parties. Despite Prohibition laws, the Hardings always had a well-stocked bar, which a member of the Attorney General’s circle later claimed was supplied with confiscated alcohol.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (30)

    via Library of Congress

    Grace Coolidge was a Red Sox fan

    While both President Calvin and First Lady Grace Coolidge were well-known baseball fanatics, not everyone realized that Mrs. Coolidge was a far more knowledgeable and enthusiastic fan than her husband. In fact, she was so devoted to the Boston Red Sox that as First Lady, she was invited to sit in the dugout with the team. Don’t miss these hilarious jokes told by U.S. presidents.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (31)

    via Library of Congress

    Louise “Lou” Hoover got involved in the China Boxer Rebellion

    The Hoovers were once ardent world travelers, but their adventures were cut short when they found themselves in the thick of China’s Boxer Rebellion in 1899. Never one to miss the action, Herbert Hoover’s wife built protective barricades and transported supplies to the front line via bicycle. Funnily enough, Mrs. Hoover was once mistakenly reported dead and read her own obituary in a Beijing newspaper.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (32)

    via Library of Congress

    Eleanor Roosevelt flew with Amelia Earhart

    In April of 1933, Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt made history by becoming the first first lady to fly in an airplane. She snuck out of a White House dinner with famed aviator Amelia Earhart and other guests, and together they commandeered an airplane near Hoover Field (where the Pentagon stands today) and spent hours flying around Baltimore. Earhart even promised to give Mrs. Roosevelt flying lessons!

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (33)

    Library of Congress/Getty Images

    Bess Truman was a proud Missourian through and through

    Although her husband traveled far and wide, Mrs. Harry S. Truman was often homesick for her native state of Missouri. In fact, she claimed to hate even the dry cleaning in Washington, D.C. and sent her laundry all the way to Kansas City to be washed instead. Check out the first jobs of all the U.S. presidents for a little glimpse of where they came from.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (34)

    NBC NewsWire/Getty Images

    Mamie Eisenhower was the Pantone of her day

    Forget fifty shades of gray—try fifty shades of pink! Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower loved the color so much that a shade of pink was designed specifically for her. Officially named “First Lady Pink” or “Mamie Pink,” it soon became the most iconic color of the 50s, covering everything from bathroom wallpaper to hairdryers to tea sets.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (35)

    Bettmann/Getty Images

    Jacqueline Kennedy won an Emmy

    Before she became a pop culture and fashion icon, John F. Kennedy’s wife won an Emmy award in 1962 for her televised tour of the White House, on which she spent over $50,000 in renovations (the equivalent of nearly $400,000 today). See what U.S. presidents have to pay for on their own.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (36)

    PhotoQuest/Getty Images

    Claudia “Lady Bird” Johnson made America’s highways more beautiful

    We can thank this First Lady, nicknamed “Lady Bird” as a child, for the wildflowers that grow on U.S. highway medians in the spring. While her husband was in office, she supported a highway beautification project that resulted in the miles of beautiful colors we enjoy today.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (37)

    Horst P. Horst/Getty Images

    Pat Nixon was a fashion renegade

    Mrs. Nixon liked to rebel against convention: she was the first First Lady to wear pants in public. Don’t miss these presidential mysteries that were never solved.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (38)

    via Library of Congress

    Betty Ford was a reluctant First Lady

    On her husband’s last day in office, Mrs. Gerald Ford was so overjoyed that she gleefully tap danced on the Cabinet room’s conference table.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (39)

    Universal History Archive/Getty Images

    Rosalynn Carter advised the president

    Mrs. Jimmy Carter took a page out of Abigail Adams’s “Mrs. President” playbook. Because of her tendency to break protocol by sitting in on Cabinet meetings, TIME magazine once billed Rosalynn “the second most powerful person in the United States.” Learn how much money the U.S. president makes.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (40)

    Courtesy Reagan Presidential Library

    Nancy Reagan was a well-known actress

    It’s easy to recognize Mrs. Reagan’s pretty face in a number of Hollywood films back in the day. Before becoming a First Lady, she starred in 11 feature films, including The Next Voice You Hear, Donovan’s Brain, and the Academy Award-nominated documentary The Dark Wave. However, her name may not be so easily found in the credits; as an actress, she went by the stage name “Nancy Davis.”

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (41)

    Consolidated News Pictures/Getty Images

    Barbara Bush supported literacy

    President George H.W. Bush’s wife wrote a memoir from her dog’s perspective entitled Millie’s Book, which describes a day in the life of the Bush family, from deliberations in the Oval Office to breaks for squirrel hunting. The proceeds of the book sales are donated to her literacy foundation, the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (42)

    KMazur/Getty Images

    Hillary Clinton won a Grammy

    Bill Clinton’s wife is the only First Lady to hold an elected position in public office, having served as Senator for New York, and she is the only First Lady to ever actively run for the Presidency herself. What is not so commonly known is she is also the only first lady to win a Grammy Award for the recording of her 1996 best-selling book, It Takes a Village and Other Lessons Children Teach Us.Check out these other surprising presidential firsts you never knew about.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (43)

    Courtesy George W Bush Presidential Library

    Laura Bush was slow to warm to the public stage

    Laura promised to marry young George W. Bush under one condition: she would never have to make a campaign speech. She soon relented, however, and became an avid campaigner during her husband’s run for office, even addressing the Republican National Convention in June 2000.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (44)

    Courtesy Whitehouse.gov

    Michelle Obama is as tall as she is graceful

    At 5’11”, President Obama’s wife is tied with Eleanor Roosevelt for the tallest of the First Ladies. But in case her bodyguards lose sight of her in a crowd, her Secret Service code name is “Renaissance.” Besides the Secret Service, see what perks presidents get to keep after leaving office.

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (45)

    Alex Wong/Getty Images

    Melania Trump is fluent in many languages

    Besides her native Slovenian, Melania Trump also speaks English, French, Serbian, and German. She will be the second first lady to have been born in another country (John Quincy Adams’ wife Louisa was the first).

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (46)

    JIM WATSON/Getty Images

    Jill Biden is a teacher

    Jill Biden has had a long, successful career in education and proudly holds two master’s degrees along with a doctoral degree. She received her Master of Education from West Chester State College while pregnant with her daughter, then a Master of Arts in English from Villanova, followed by her Doctor of Education when she was 55 years old from the University of Delaware. Even while serving as the Second Lady, she continued to maintain her own professional life by teaching English at Northern Virginia Community College and plans to continue to teach during Joe Biden’s presidency. Next, see what rules every first family is required to follow.

    Originally Published: December 18, 2020

    Author

    Brooke Nelson Alexander

    Brooke is a two-time Emmy-nominated tech and consumer products reporter with nearly 10 years of experience covering the latest in digital trends, product reviews, cybersecurity and privacy, along with other news and features. Her work has been published by U.S. News & World Report and recognized by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association.

    Read More

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (47)

    Originally Published in Reader's Digest

    45 Facts You Never Knew About America’s First Ladies (2024)
    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Edwin Metz

    Last Updated:

    Views: 6586

    Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

    Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Edwin Metz

    Birthday: 1997-04-16

    Address: 51593 Leanne Light, Kuphalmouth, DE 50012-5183

    Phone: +639107620957

    Job: Corporate Banking Technician

    Hobby: Reading, scrapbook, role-playing games, Fishing, Fishing, Scuba diving, Beekeeping

    Introduction: My name is Edwin Metz, I am a fair, energetic, helpful, brave, outstanding, nice, helpful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.