The inauguration is really about swearing in the next president, but first ladies throughout history have stolen the show ...
President William Henry Harrison delivered his inaugural address on a bitterly cold day in March 1841. He refused to wear a ...
As the Great Depression deepened in early 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first inaugural address offered hope to the disillusioned nation. “This great Nation,” he assured the American people ...
In his first inaugural in 1933, Franklin Roosevelt moved out of campaign mode and acknowledged the constraints on his “leadership of frankness and vigor.” He pledged to rely on his ...
The incoming first lady Melania Trump has many asking, “What will Melania wear?” The interest in first ladies inaugural fashion has even puzzled some first ladies and their next of kin. In 1912 when ...
In his first inaugural in 1933, Franklin Roosevelt moved out of campaign mode and acknowledged the constraints on his “leadership of frankness and vigor.” He pledged to rely on his “constitutional ...
Early on, I landed on my top five: Lincoln’s first and second inaugural addresses, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first inaugural address and “Four Freedoms” State of the Union speech and John F.
Katherine A.S. Sibley wrote in "A Companion to First Ladies." The shade of Eleanor Roosevelt's inaugural gown became known as "Eleanor Blue" at President Franklin D. Roosevelt's first inauguration.
Here, WWD highlights what first ladies wore from Eleanor Roosevelt to Jill Biden. Eleanor Roosevelt posing in the Sally Milgrim gown that she wore to her husband Franklin’s second inaugural ...