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  1. Research Lou Henry Hoover. Louise Henry Hoover was the wife of President Herbert Hoover and although she is primarily known as the former First Lady, she had many accomplishments of her own. She was deeply influenced by her childhood spent in Whittier although she was born in Waterloo, Iowa on March 29, 1874.

  2. After Lou Henry Hoover’s death in 1944, the house was donated to the university. It has ever since been the university president’s home. In 1985 it was declared a National Historic Landmark. Hoover@100 Homepage. Explore the deep connection between Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover and their alma mater, Stanford University.

  3. The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum is excited to commemorate the 150th birthdays of both Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover with a special new temporary exhibit: “Hoover 150: A Birthday Celebration.”. This exhibit will serve as the final temporary exhibit at the Museum prior to the Museum’s complete remodel and renovation.

  4. Lou Henry (1874-1944) Hoover was the wife of President Herbert Hoover and served as First Lady of the United States from 1929 to 1933. Lou Henry was born March 29 th, in Waterloo, Iowa, 1874. During her childhood, her father, Charles Delano Henry, always took her on camping trips in the mountains. She learnt how to ride horses and hunted during ...

  5. Jun 8, 2012 · Lou’s involvement with the Girl Scouts began during World War I, when she was asked to be a troop leader for a Washington, DC, scout troop. Of course, one project that the girls worked on was a victory garden! Lou Henry Hoover speaking from the President's Study in the White House on a special Girl Scouts program.

  6. Prof. Young's volume suggests that Lou Henry Hoover (1874-1944) was an activist First Lady who in many ways forecast the more visible roles played by her successors. As a young wife during World War I, she was a full partner as Herbert Hoover organized European relief efforts.

  7. Lou Henry Hoover’s research was never superseded. Its influence has spread quietly over the decades until quotations from Lou Henry Hoover’s annotations are now ubiquitous in the literature on the role of technology in the course of civilization. Not forgotten, Lou Henry’s extraordinary decryption of Agricola has now become a standard tool.

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