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  1. Martha Jefferson Randolph

    Martha Jefferson Randolph

    First Lady of the United States from 1801 to 1809

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  1. Martha Jefferson Randolph. Thomas Jeffersons wife, Martha, died many years before his presidency. As a result, their eldest daughter Martha Jefferson Randolph stepped into the role of first lady and hostess when he became president. Martha “Patsy” Jefferson was born on September 27, 1772.

  2. Jul 11, 2013 · July 11, 2013. Of the first four First Ladies, the least is known about Martha Jefferson. Though she died about 18 and a half years before Thomas Jefferson became president, she is still considered a First Lady because she is the only spouse he had.

  3. She was there again in 1805–1806 and gave birth to a son named for James Madison, the first president’s grandchild born in the White House. It was Martha Randolph with her family who shared Jefferson’s retirement at Monticello until he died there in 1826.

  4. Martha Jefferson Randolph, eldest daughter of Thomas and Martha Jefferson, has often been incorrectly identified as the White House hostess during the eight-year Jefferson presidency. Her father called her “ Patsy, ” and that was the name she was known by within her family.

  5. Randolph, Martha Jefferson (1775–1836) American hostess and close companion of her father Thomas Jefferson. Name variations: Patsy Randolph. Born at Monticello, Albemarle County, Virginia, on September 27, 1775; died on October 10, 1836, and was buried in the graveyard at Monticello; eldest daughter of Thomas Jefferson (president of the ...

  6. Martha Jefferson Randolph. 1801-1809. Martha Jefferson Randolph (1772–1836) Born Monticello, Virginia. The education of Martha “Patsy” Jefferson, in Philadelphia and Paris, was closely overseen by her father, Thomas Jefferson, who doted on his eldest child.

  7. Thomas Jefferson’s eldest daughter, Martha “Patsy” Jefferson Randolph, often managed the Monticello household after Jefferson's retirement. On Mulberry Row, she oversaw the wash house , dairy , smokehouses, and textile workshop. She supervised the enslaved men and women on the mountaintop, from choosing “the clothing for the house ...

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