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Helen "Nellie" Taft

 
Who2 Biography: Helen "Nellie" Taft, U.S. First Lady

  • Born: 2 June 1861
  • Birthplace: Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Died: 22 May 1943
  • Best Known As: President William Howard Taft's wife

Name at birth: Helen Herron

Helen "Nellie" Taft was the wife of William Howard Taft and served as the First Lady of the United States from 1909-13. Intelligent, educated and ambitious, she grew up in a politically connected Ohio family (at the age of 17 she and her family were guests in the White House of President Rutherford B. Hayes). She married William Taft in 1886 and supported his legal and political career, often with a zeal that put her in the history books as the one who pushed Taft to become president. Two months after her husband was sworn in as president, Nellie suffered a stroke and spent most of the next year in recovery. By the end of 1910 she was back to managing the household and budget of the White House and hosting parties and social events. As First Lady, she organized the planting of the capital's cherry trees, now a landmark of Washington, D.C. The first First Lady to publish an autobiography (Recollections of Full Years, 1914), Helen Herron Taft was buried in Arlington Cemetery, the only First Lady interred there until 1994, when Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was buried next to John Kennedy.

Her daughter's name was Helen Herron Taft... Her son, Robert A. Taft was a U.S. senator from Ohio from 1939-53.

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1861-1943.

First Lady of the United States (1909-1913) as the wife of President William Howard Taft. She arranged for the planting of several thousand cherry trees around Washington, D.C.


Wikipedia: Helen Herron Taft
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Helen Herron Taft


In office
March 4, 1909 – March 4, 1913
Preceded by Edith Roosevelt
Succeeded by Ellen Axson Wilson

Born June 2, 1861(1861-06-02)
Cincinnati, Ohio
Died May 22, 1943 (aged 81)
Washington, D.C.
Spouse(s) William Howard Taft
Children Robert, Helen and Charles
Occupation First Lady of the United States
Signature

Helen Louise Herron "Nellie" Taft (June 2, 1861May 22, 1943) was the wife of William Howard Taft and First Lady of the United States from 1909 to 1913.

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the fourth child of Judge John Williamson Herron (1827-1912), a law partner of Rutherford B. Hayes, and Harriet Collins-Herron (1833-1901), Nellie graduated from the Cincinnati College of Music and taught school briefly before her marriage. With her parents, she attended the twenty-fifth wedding anniversary celebration of President and Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes at the White House in 1877.

Two years later, she met William Howard Taft at a bobsledding party in Cincinnati; he was 22 years old, she was 18. He asked her out for the first time in February 1880, but they did not date regularly until 1882. He proposed in April 1885, and she accepted in May.

Taft married Nellie on June 19, 1886, at the home of the bride's parents in Cincinnati. The wedding was performed by the Reverend D.N.A. Hoge of Zanesville, Ohio. Taft's younger brother Horace Taft was best man. The couple honeymooned one day in New York City and four days at Sea Bright, New Jersey, before setting off on a three-month tour of Europe.

On their return, they settled in Cincinnati. Mrs. Taft encouraged her husband's political career despite his oft-stated preference for the judiciary. She welcomed each step in her husband's political career: state judge, Solicitor General of the United States, and federal circuit court judge. In 1900 he agreed to take charge of American civil government in the Philippines. Further travel with her husband, who became Secretary of War in 1904, brought a widened interest in world politics and a cosmopolitan circle of friends.

The Tafts had two sons and a daughter. Robert Alphonso Taft (1889-1953) was a political leader, Helen Taft (1891-1987) was an educator, and Charles Phelps Taft II (1897-1983) was a civic leader.

White House portrait

As First Lady, she was the first wife of a president to ride alongside her husband down Pennsylvania Avenue on Inauguration Day (heretofore the outgoing chief executive had accompanied the new president). Two months after entering the White House, Mrs. Taft suffered a stroke, impairing her speech. She never fully recovered. With the help of her sisters, however, she entertained moderately. She received guests three afternoons a week in the Red Room.

The social highlight of the Taft administration was the silver wedding anniversary gala (June 19, 1911) for some 8,000 guests. In her most lasting contribution as First Lady, Mrs. Taft arranged for the planting of the 3,000 Japanese cherry trees that grace the Washington Tidal Basin; with the wife of the Japanese ambassador, she personally planted the first two saplings in ceremonies on March 27, 1912.

The Tafts were divided over Prohibition: the former president was a Dry; Mrs. Taft a Wet. With Taft's appointment to the Supreme Court, Mrs. Taft became the only woman to be both First Lady and wife of a chief justice.

She died on May 22, 1943, and was buried next to the president at Arlington National Cemetery.

References

Honorary titles
Preceded by
Edith Roosevelt
First Lady of the United States
1909–1913
Succeeded by
Ellen Louise Wilson

 
 

 

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Helen "Nellie" Taft biography from Who2.  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Helen Herron Taft" Read more