Yahoo France Recherche Web

  1. amazon.fr a été visité par plus de 1 million utilisateurs le mois dernier

    Bonnes affaires sur les jane pierce dans dvd sur Amazon. Petits prix sur jane pierce. Livraison gratuite (voir cond)

Résultats de recherche

  1. Jane Means Appleton Pierce, née le 12 mars 1806 à Hampton (New Hampshire) et morte le 2 décembre 1863 à Andover (Massachusetts), est l'épouse du président américain Franklin Pierce. Elle a été la Première dame des États-Unis de 1853 à 1857.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jane_PierceJane Pierce - Wikipedia

    Jane Means Pierce (née Appleton; March 12, 1806 – December 2, 1863) was the wife of Franklin Pierce and the first lady of the United States from 1853 to 1857. She married Franklin Pierce, then a congressman, in 1834 despite her family's misgivings.

  3. Jane Pierce, American first lady (185357), the wife of Franklin Pierce, 14th president of the United States. The Franklin family was beset by numerous tragedies, which she believed were connected to her husband’s political success, and a deeply depressed Jane rarely left the White House.

    • Betty Boyd Caroli
  4. Jane Pierce was the wife of President Franklin Pierce and the mother of four sons who died young. She suffered from depression and grief and held séances at the White House to contact her deceased loved ones.

  5. www.history.com › topics › first-ladiesJane Pierce - HISTORY

    2 déc. 2009 · Jane Pierce (1806-63) was the wife of the 14th U.S. president and the first lady from 1853 to 1857. She disliked political life, suffered from depression and tuberculosis, and died in Massachusetts.

  6. Jane Pierce. Jane Pierce had already experienced the deaths of two sons when her husband, Franklin Pierce, was elected president. Then, two months before the inauguration in 1853, their only surviving child, Benjamin, was killed before her eyes in a train accident. She never recovered from her loss.

  7. Jane Pierce. Jane Appleton was born on March 12, 1806, to parents Elizabeth and Jesse Appleton. Following the death of her father, a Congregationalist minister and president of Bowdoin College, Jane attended boarding school in Keene, New Hampshire.