FROM OTHER SOURCES:
Julia Gardiner Tyler
(1820-1889)
NOTES:
Second Wife of John Tyler
Julia Gardiner was born in New York, a debutante at fifteen, she was the belle of the ball and the society pages quickly dubbed her the Rose of Long Island.
Late in 1841 she and her family visited Washington for the winter social season and there, through arrangements made by Dolley Madison, she met the newly widowered Tyler who took more than a casual interest. He wrote letters and she replied.
The following year Tyler invited her father and family back to Washington and while there he arranged a tour of the Navy's newest ship. While onboard observing a demostration of the ship's guns, her father was killed in an explosion.
Naturally, Tyler offered his condolences and comfort to Julia and soon gained her consent to become engaged. They were married in New York on June 26, 1844, the first President to marry while in office.
She was First Lady for the last eight months of his term.
The Tylers retired to Virginia where they remained until his death in 1862. They had seven children:
- David Gardiner Tyler (1846-1927);
- John Alexander Tyler (1848-83);
- Julia Gardiner Tyler (1849-71);
- Lachlan Tyler (1851-1902);
- Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853-1935);
- Robert Fitzwalter Tyler (1856-1927);
- Pearl Tyler (1860-1947)
This seven plus the eight children with Letitia gives John Tyler the distinction of the most offspring of any American President.
Julia supported the political views of her husband by defending states' rights and the right to own slaves.
At the outbreak of the Civil War Julia collected the family papers and took them to a Richmond bank vault for safe keeping. Later in the war the Bank was destroyed and the papers lost along with letters and photos.
As the War raged, she fled to New York and as a refugee there she worked secretly and voluntarily for the Confederacy.
The defeat of the south left her without money or means of support.
In 1880 Congress voted her a $1,200 per year pension, ten years after providing for Mary Todd Lincoln.
After Garfield's assassination, Congress voted $5,000 per year for Mrs. Garfield, Mrs. Lincoln, Mrs. Polk, and Mrs. Tyler.
With this pension she was able to live comfortably and spent her last year's in Richmond where she died in 1889. She is buried in Richmond beside her husband.
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