Index

Index

Martha Washington
Abigail Adams
Martha Jefferson
Dolley Madison
Elizabeth Monroe
Louisa Adams
Rachel Jackson
Hannah Van Buren
Anna Harrison
Letitia Tyler
Julia Tyler
Sarah Polk
Abigail Fillmore
Jane Pierce
Harriet Lane Johnson
Mary Lincoln
Eliza Johnson
Julia Grant
Lucy Hayes
Lucretia Garfield
Ellen Arthur
Frances Cleveland
Caroline Harrison
Ida McKinley
Edith Roosevelt
Helen Taft
Ellen Wilson
Edith Wilson
Florence Harding
Grace Coolidge
Lou Hoover
Eleanor Roosevelt
Bess Truman
Mamie Eisenhower
Jacqueline Kennedy
Lady Bird Johnson
Pat Nixon
Betty Ford
Rosalynn Carter
Nancy Reagan
Barbara Bush
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Laura Bush
Michelle Obama



 

 

Lou Henry Hoover
1929-1933

Lou Henry was born on March 29, 1874 in Waterloo, Iowa. When she was ten she and her family moved to California.

In 1894, she enrolled at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

She was the only female geology major at Stanford.

Lou Henry was the first woman to graduate from Stanford with a degree in geology.

She met Herbert Hoover in the geology lab at Stanford.

Both she and Herbert were born in Iowa and in the same year.

Lou Hoover

Library of Congress

They were married on February 10, 1899 in Monterey, California.

For their honeymoon, they took a slow boat to China. (Herbert was taking a job with a mining company in China.)

Mrs. Hoover learned Chinese while she was in China.

Lou and Herbert had two sons, Herbert Jr. and Allan.

Herbert Hoover became a millionaire.

During WWI Hoover was appointed by President Wilson to be his food administrator.

Later Hoover became President.

Lou was very happy being First Lady. However, the stock market crash of October, 1929 began the Great Depression.

Mrs. Hoover to improve the rights of minorities and women.

Mrs. Hoover worked to help the needy. She made a radio speech from the White House urging women to help the needy. (The radio speech from the White House was a first for a First Lady.)

Lou had a sudden heart attack on January 7, 1944 and died. She was buried at Palo Alto, but later her body was moved to West Branch, Iowa where she rests next to her husband.


 

 

Visit our site on U.S. Presidents

 

 



 
First Ladies
 

Books and Websites

Books

Smithsonian Presidents and First Ladiesby James Barber and Amy Pastan.
First Ladies: Women Who Called The White House Home (First Ladies) by Beatrice Gormeley.

Websites

http://www.firstladies.org/ National First Ladies Library
http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/list/058_flal.htmlLibrary of Congress, Images of the First Ladies

 

 

 

Comments and/or corrections should be sent to Jim at jim@anewadventure.org.

 

 

 

 

 

This page was last modified: January 19, 2012