Rachel Jackson

GPTKB entity

Properties (60)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instanceOf Person
gptkbp:associatedWith gptkb:Louisa_Adams
gptkb:Martin_Van_Buren
gptkb:William_Henry_Harrison
gptkb:Pat_Nixon
gptkb:Elizabeth_Monroe
gptkb:Jill_Biden
gptkb:Betty_Ford
gptkb:George_Washington
gptkb:Thomas_Jefferson
gptkb:James_Monroe
gptkb:Mary_Todd_Lincoln
gptkb:James_Madison
gptkb:Michelle_Obama
gptkb:Laura_Bush
gptkb:Julia_Grant
gptkb:Nancy_Reagan
gptkb:Henry_Clay
gptkb:Hillary_Clinton
gptkb:John_Quincy_Adams
gptkb:Dolley_Madison
gptkb:Rosalynn_Carter
gptkbp:birthPlace gptkb:North_Carolina
gptkbp:born June 15, 1767
gptkbp:burialPlace gptkb:Hermitage,_Nashville,_Tennessee
gptkbp:children gptkb:Andrew_Jackson_Jr.
Evelyn_Jackson
gptkbp:community_service Illness_during_Andrew_Jackson's_presidency
gptkbp:cultural_heritage gptkb:Scots-Irish
gptkbp:culturalImpact Influenced_depictions_of_First_Ladies_in_media
gptkbp:deathPlace gptkb:Washington,_D.C.
gptkbp:depictedIn Books
Films
Television shows
Documentaries
Plays
gptkbp:died December 22, 1828
gptkbp:historicalContext Early 19th century America
gptkbp:historicalSignificance First Lady during a tumultuous political era
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label Rachel Jackson
gptkbp:influence Andrew_Jackson's_political_career
gptkbp:knownFor Being_the_wife_of_Andrew_Jackson
gptkbp:legacy Influence on the role of First Lady
gptkbp:marriageDate January 7, 1791
gptkbp:nationality American
gptkbp:nickname gptkb:The_Lady_of_the_White_House
gptkbp:personalLife Had a close relationship with her family
Faced personal tragedies
Advocated for social causes
Experienced public scrutiny
gptkbp:politicalAffiliation Promoted her husband's presidential campaign
gptkbp:politicalPosition Era of Jacksonian Democracy
gptkbp:publicAccess Controversial due to her marriage circumstances
gptkbp:religion Presbyterianism
gptkbp:role First Lady of the United States
gptkbp:socialResponsibility First Lady
gptkbp:spouse gptkb:Nashville,_Tennessee
gptkb:Andrew_Jackson
gptkbp:termEnd June 8, 1845
gptkbp:termStart March 4, 1829