Yahoo Web Search

  1. Peggy Eaton
    American politician

Search results

  1. Jul 21, 2023 · In 1818, Peggy and John Timberlake met John Eaton, a wealthy lawyer who had been recently elected U.S. Senator and was a good friend of Andrew Jackson. Acquainted with Timberlake’s financial difficulties, Eaton paid Timberlake’s debts and found him another more lucrative position within the U.S. Navy. Rumors about John Eaton and Peggy O ...

  2. Apr 27, 2022 · After John Timberlake, died at sea in 1828, his widow Peggy married Eaton. Rumors soon spread throughout Washington suggesting that Timberlake had taken his own life after learning of Peggys supposed affair with Easton. However, the Navy concluded Timberlake had died of pneumonia.

  3. Dec 20, 2019 · The Eaton Affair, also known as the Petticoat Affair (and even the Petticoat War), opens a window into the gender politics of the dawn of the Jacksonian Era. Essentially a sex scandal , by 1831 the Eaton Affair was a national political issue, raising questions of manhood, womanhood, Presidential power, politics, and morality.

  4. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Eaton, Peggy (c. 1799–1879)Well-known and controversial figure of her day—implicated in the fall of Andrew Jackson's first Cabinet, the ascension of Martin Van Buren to the presidency, and the political eclipse of John C. Source for information on Eaton, Peggy (c. 1799–1879): Women in ...

  5. Jun 12, 2006 · According to modern Jackson biographer Robert V. Remini, at a grand ball on inauguration night, ‘the other ladies in the official family tried not to notice as Peggy Eaton swept into the room and startled everyone with her presence and beauty.’

  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › Peggy_EatonPeggy Eaton - Wikiwand

    Margaret Eaton ( née O'Neill, formerly Timberlake, later Buchignani; December 3, 1799 – November 8, 1879), was the wife of John Henry Eaton, a United States senator from Tennessee and United States Secretary of War, and a confidant of Andrew Jackson.

  7. Peggy Eaton unintentionally created a serious scandal with her beauty, wit, and loquaciousness, all of which combined with the questionable circumstances of her marriage caused Washington’s elite ladies (and thus their husbands) to spurn her.

  1. People also search for