fbpx
Wikipedia

Mary Johnson Stover

Mary Johnson Stover (May 8, 1832 – April 19, 1883) was a daughter of 17th U.S. President Andrew Johnson and his wife Eliza McCardle. Stover and her three children lived at the White House during the Johnson administration, as Stover's husband, a soldier in the Union Army, had died during the American Civil War and their East Tennessee homestead had been pillaged by Confederates. Stover assisted her older sister Martha Patterson as an acting First Lady of the United States.

Mary Johnson Stover
Born(1832-05-08)May 8, 1832
DiedApril 19, 1883(1883-04-19) (aged 50)
Resting placeAndrew Johnson National Cemetery
Spouse(s)Daniel Stover, William R. Brown
ChildrenEliza Johnson Stover, Sarah Drake Stover, Andrew Johnson Stover
Parents

Biography edit

Early life and first marriage edit

Mary Johnson was born May 8, 1832, in the family home on Water Street, Greeneville, Tennessee, the third-born of the five children of Andrew and Eliza (McCardle) Johnson.[1] Andrew Johnson, who had grown up quite poor and had received a minimal education, made a point to send his children to good schools. Mary attended Rogersville Female Institute (originally Odd Fellows Female Institute) in Rogersville, Hawkins County, Tennessee.[2]

In 1852, while her father was serving what would be his last of five terms as the Representative of Tennessee's 1st congressional district, Mary Johnson married Daniel Stover, a farmer from Carter County, Tennessee. According to the 1928 biography of Andrew Johnson by Winston, Stover was "a typical blue-eyed mountaineer, soon to become Colonel of the Fourth Tennessee Union Infantry. He was a man of high courage...Dan, a nephew of Mordecai Lincoln,[a] was the person of all others Andrew Johnson would have selected as a son-in-law."[3] Stover had a "fine plantation" in the Watauga Valley.[3] In 1860, on the cusp of the Civil War, the family was living together in Carter County. Daniel Stover owned a farm worth US$18,000 (equivalent to $610,400 in 2023) and a personal estate worth US$12,000 (equivalent to $406,933 in 2023). Their daughter Eliza Johnson Stover, age five, was attending school. Sarah Drake Stover was three years old, and the baby, Andrew Johnson Stover, was two months old.[4]

 
1853 silhouette of Andrew, Martha, Mary and Eliza Johnson (Tennessee State Museum)

In June 1861, Daniel Stover was a delegate from Carter County to the pro-Union East Tennessee Convention.[5] During the first autumn of the American Civil War, Stover participated in a guerrilla warfare action called the East Tennessee bridge burnings. He was one of four men who knew of the plan prior to the last 24 hours before the attacks were to be executed.[6] The November 8, 1861 bridge burning was carried out with the approval of Union leaders, including Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, and was supposed to clear the way for the occupation of East Tennessee by federal forces. Nine bridges were targeted, five were destroyed; Stover led the raid that successfully destroyed Holston River Bridge at Union Depot, also called Zollicoffer, now called Bluff City, Tennessee.[7] However, the United States Army did not come marching in to East Tennessee, and Confederate Secretary of War Judah Benjamin ordered that any captured bridge burners be put to death. To live and fight another day, the bridge burners retreated into the hills.[8] Stover and his allies lived for months in the Pond Mountains in eastern Carter County.[9]

 
Col. Daniel Stover II (1826–1864), farmer, slave owner, East Tennessee bridge burner, and "Lincolnite"

Amidst the ongoing conflict, Daniel Stover remained in hiding in the wilderness through the cold and wet winter of 1861–62, while Eliza McCardle Johnson and her youngest son Frank lived with Mary and her children in Carter County.[10] Mary Stover and her mother Eliza Johnson prepared daily baskets of provisions, baking countless loaves of bread and turning the farm's hogs and beeves into hams and ribs, for the men in the hills and their distressed families elsewhere in the county.[11] Per Holloway's 1871 Ladies of the White House, "Most of the men who were with Mr. Stover were poor, and their families, left to the mercy of their enemies, would have starved, had it not been for the care and generosity of Mrs. Stover."[11] Stover was eventually permitted to come home "on parole" due to intercessions on his behalf by Confederate-aligned friends.[11] In October 1862 the Stovers, Eliza and Frank Johnson were driven out of their Carter County home and sent to Murfreesboro.[12] After they left, the residence and farm buildings were pillaged.[13] The Stovers, accompanied by Eliza, moved around a bit in early 1863, staying for a time in Indiana and in Louisville, Kentucky.[14] The family travelled together to Nashville arriving May 30, 1863, where Col. and Mrs. Stover, Eliza and Andrew Johnson were welcomed by a large crowd.[14] However, due to chronic health problems from his time in the wilderness, Stover "did not see much active service in the field," and resigned from the United States Army on August 10, 1864, due to illness.[15] He died at Nashville just before Christmas of that year.[16]

White House years edit

 
Stover and her children during their time in the White House (Century Magazine, 1908)

While her older sister Martha Johnson Patterson, is generally, and rightly, named as the de facto First Lady of the Johnson administration, Mary Stover was also present at the White House for much (but not all)[17] of her father's presidency, and assisted her sister in managing the household and hosting events.[18] For example, shortly after his impeachment, Andrew Johnson hosted a dinner party for 40 guests. Eliza McCardle remained in her room, as was her habit, "but Martha and Mary efficiently took her place as hostesses."[19] One reference says that Mary mainly cared for Eliza while Martha typically handled the work of greeting guests.[20] Martha and Mary together brought five young children to live at the Executive Mansion, and recollections of their energy and strong relationship with "grandpa" (President Johnson) are prominent in various recollections of life at the White House. Among other things, an 1868 birthday party for Andrew Johnson, which was organized by the grandchildren, was one of only two times that Eliza McCardle ever appeared at a public event during her husband's presidency.[21][b]

The only decoration of the East Room was the erection of a platform for the musicians, which was covered with pink tarleton [d] and festooned with evergreens. At each corner stood a flower-stand containing beautiful bouquets. The musicians were from the marine band. At seven o'clock Professor Marini,[23] dancing master, marshalled the children in the long hall and arranged them in couples, after which, the grand promenade commenced, led by a son of General Eastman[c] and Miss Lily Stover. The promenade was succeeded in regular order by the following programme: Second, quadrille, Faust; third, polka, Von Bilse; fourth, schottische, Weverein; fifth, Lanciers, Weingarten; sixth, gallop, John Strauss; Intermission. ¶ During the intermission, the juveniles were ushered into the spacious State Dining Room, where a magnificent table, loaded down with cakes, fruits, confectionery, and flowers, and splendidly decorated under the able management of Steward [James L.] Thomas,[24] awaited them. The happy party at once proceeded to do full justice to the good things provided, and for an hour that room contained the merriest throng ever assembled around that festive board. Among the number present were the children of the President's family, Frank Johnson, Andrew Patterson, Andrew Stover, Lily Stover, and Belle Patterson, the latter being also generally regarded as the belle of the party.[21]

— The Ladies of the White House (1871)

The Stovers spent summers in Tennessee but came back to the White House each fall.[25] Mary Stover also left the White House in the capable hands of her sister toward the end of her father's term, leaving early to return to Tennessee and set up a household for herself, her children and her ailing mother.[26]

Second marriage and later life edit

In 1869, just after the end of her father's presidency, Mary Johnson Stover remarried, to William Ramsay Brown (1819–1902), a merchant of Greeneville, Tennessee.[27] (Notably, Brown's late first wife, Mary Sophia Lincoln, had been a cousin of Abraham Lincoln through her father Mordecai Lincoln.)[28][29][d] The wedding was a private evening ceremony, attended only by family, on April 20, 1869.[26] Two days later, Mary Johnson Stover Brown's younger brother Robert Johnson, who had long struggled with alcoholism, killed himself with an overdose of alcohol and laudanum.[31] Circa 1870, a newspaper reporter described Brown as "a plain and elderly-looking gentleman, well-to-do in the world, from dry goods and groceries."[32]

 
Brown and Stover children in the "blended family" household of William R. and Mary J. Brown in Greeneville, 1870

The Browns had a home across the street from the Johnsons in Greeneville.[26] However, the marriage was unhappy.[33][28] After a short period of time, the couple were "more or less estranged"[34] and lived separately (Mary spending most of her time at the Stover farm in Carter County). Former President and recently elected U.S. Senator Andrew Johnson died while visiting Mary's home near Elizabethton, Tennessee in 1875, although Mary did not attend the funeral because she was caring for her mother.[35] Eliza died about six months later, in early 1876; Mary waited until both her parents had died to file for divorce in February 1876.[33][36] There were "rumors that Brown was abusive or mismanaged Stover's children's inheritance" although the divorce records only weakly support the latter claim; nonetheless, the judge granted the divorce within five days of filing. Mary used the surname Stover for the remainder of her life.[36]

 
"Governor Porter, ex-Senators Patterson, Fowler, Dr. W. R. Sevier and other prominent men" photographed in front of Brown's Corner, also known as Johnson's Block, on Main Street in Greeneville on the occasion of ex-president Johnson's funeral; Brown's Corner may have been the location of William R. Brown's business

In 1880, Mary was living with 23-year-old Sarah Stover and two household servants in Union, Tennessee (Sullivan County).[37] As a single mother, Stover prospered financially, acquiring land in Tennessee and Texas, and profiting from her inherited share of the Holston Cotton Mills in Bluff City. She built a spacious brick home nearby, called Stover House.[36] Mary's step-daughter-in-law Lula May visited Stover Hall as a child and described Mary as "the handsomest woman I ever saw—tall, with reddish brown hair."[38] Stover died in 1883 at age 50, of tuberculosis,[39] leaving most of her estate to her two daughters.[36] She is buried near her parents and children at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery in Tennessee.[40] Stover House in Bluff City burned in 1906 but many artefacts of the Johnson family were saved from destruction. A new home, called Long Shadows, was built on the foundations.[41] William R. Brown outlived his ex-wife by almost two decades and was a "honorary pallbearer" at her sister Martha Patterson's funeral in 1901.[42]

 
Abandoned Stover farmhouse, photographed c. 1935 and described in the 1939 American Guide to Tennessee: "At 3.3 m. on State 91, at the northern end of the bridge is the junction with a graveled road that runs along the river. Left on this road to another graveled road leading 0.9 m. to the DANIEL STOVER HOUSE (R). This two-story frame house, now abandoned, stands in the yard of another two-story frame house."[43] (Lincoln Memorial University Libraries via Digital Library of Appalachia)

Descendants edit

† indicates individual is buried in family burial plot at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery[40]

  • Eliza Johnson "Lillie" Stover† (May 11, 1855 – November 5, 1892) m. October 14, 1875 to Thomas F. Maloney (December 6, 1846 – March 15, 1907) - no issue
  • Sarah Drake Stover† (June 27, 1857 – March 22, 1886) m. June 7, 1881 to William Bruce Bachman (November 25, 1852 – September 9, 1922)
    • Andrew Johnson Bachman† (June 13, 1882 – January 26, 1955) m. September 28, 1920 to Ethel Crockett Irwin† - marriage had no issue
    • Samuel Bernard Bachman (May 13, 1884 – April 13, 1914) - unmarried, no issue
  • Andrew Johnson Stover† (March 6, 1860 – January 25, 1923) - unmarried, no issue

Lillie Stover Maloney edit

Lillie's husband Thomas Maloney had been at one time a private secretary to Andrew Johnson.[44] Around 1874–75 Maloney was a co-editor of the Greeneville Intelligencer with Lillie's paternal uncle Frank Johnson (who was only three years older than her).[45] Lillie and Thomas eventually divorced; the marriage had produced no children.[46][47] At the time of Lillie's death she was described as Miss Stover.[48] After Sarah died, Lillie was involved in raising for her two sons, who "came to love her as a mother."[49] Lillie Stover died in November 1892 at age 37, from consumption, which has been "so fatal in the Johnson family"[49] at the East Tennessee Tuberculosis Sanatorium, where she had been hospitalized since January.[50]

Sarah Stover Bachman edit

Sarah had two children with husband William B. Bachman, who was a Tennessee state legislator and delegate to presidential nominating conventions.[38] After Sarah died, her widower husband married second, Lula May Peterson.[38] William and Lula had four children of their own; they and their descendants preserved Johnson family relics and stories at Long Shadows well into the 1960s.[38]

Andrew Johnson Stover edit

 
"Andrew Johnson Stover, the Hermit of Holston Mountains, and His Pet Opossum" (Boston Globe, 1914)

Stover's son, Andrew Johnson Stover, was known as the "baby of the White House" during his grandfather's presidency. At age 13 he suffered a concussive head injury that apparently left him in a state of arrested mental development. He became an avid outdoorsman, spent time learning skills from Native Americans at a property his mother owned in Texas, and ultimately became a mountain hermit. He was legally under the guardianship of lawyers in Greeneville but lived independently alone in a hut for decades, only coming down from the mountain (against his better judgment) when his guardians insisted that it was going to snow. His mountain redoubt was not far from where his father had lived in hiding during the winter of 1861–62.[51][52][53][54][55] Andrew Johnson Stover died at age 63 after a brief bout with pneumonia.[56]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Stover's maternal grandmother Phoebe Ward Stover was in-laws with the Lincoln family through her sister Mary Ward's marriage to Isaac Lincoln. Isaac Lincoln's brother Abraham Lincoln was father of Mordecai Lincoln (and paternal grandfather of President Abraham Lincoln). In some tellings this made Stover a nephew of Mordecai Lincoln.[3]
  2. ^ Mrs. Johnson also emerged from seclusion for an event for Queen Emma of Hawaii in 1866.[22]
  3. ^ "General Eastman" is possibly Seth Eastman?
  4. ^ In 1827, as justice of the peace, Mordecai Lincoln officiated the wedding of Andrew Johnson and Eliza McCardle.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ Winston (1928), p. 95.
  2. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 73.
  3. ^ a b c Winston (1928), p. 97.
  4. ^ "Mary Stover in entry for Daniel Stover", United States Census, 1860 – via FamilySearch
  5. ^ "page 1 part 1 of E. Tennessee convention". Brownlow's Tri-Weekly Whig. June 25, 1861. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
  6. ^ Scott & Angel (1903), p. 65.
  7. ^ Storie (2013), p. 38.
  8. ^ Storie (2013), p. 42.
  9. ^ Storie (2013), p. 52.
  10. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 150.
  11. ^ a b c Holloway (1871), p. 636.
  12. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 161.
  13. ^ Holloway (1871), p. 638.
  14. ^ a b Trefousse (1989), p. 168.
  15. ^ Scott & Angel (1903), p. 504.
  16. ^ Scott & Angel (1903), p. 510.
  17. ^ Crook, William H.; Gerry, Margarita Spalding (1908). "Andrew Johnson in the White House". Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine. Scribner & Company. pp. 653–669.
  18. ^ "Obituary for Andrew Johnson Stover (Aged 75)". The Chattanooga News. January 29, 1923. p. 2. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  19. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 320.
  20. ^ Commire, Anne, ed. (2002). "Stover, Mary Johnson (1832–1883)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Waterford, Connecticut: Yorkin Publications. ISBN 0-7876-4074-3.
  21. ^ a b Holloway (1871), p. 644–645.
  22. ^ Watson (2001), p. 120.
  23. ^ "Professor Marini". Evening Star. October 21, 1863. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-06-15 – via Newspapers.com.
  24. ^ Administrative History 1791–1983: The White House & President's Park (PDF). U.S. National Park Service. n.d. p. 110.
  25. ^ Holloway (1871), p. 642.
  26. ^ a b c Holloway (1871), p. 649.
  27. ^ "William Ramsay Brown". www.familysearch.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  28. ^ a b History of the Lincoln Family: An Account of the Descendants of Samuel Lincoln, of Hingham, Massachusetts, 1637-1920. Commonwealth Press. 1923. p. 351. ISBN 978-0-598-80583-6.
  29. ^ "Mary Sophia Lincoln". www.familysearch.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  30. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 28.
  31. ^ "Collection: Andrew Johnson Papers". scout.lib.utk.edu. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  32. ^ "Andy Johnson in his Rural Home". Nashville Union and American. December 23, 1870. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-07-06.
  33. ^ a b Trefousse (1989), p. 358.
  34. ^ Johnson (2000), p. 494.
  35. ^ Trefousse (1989), p. 377.
  36. ^ a b c d Schroeder-Lein & Zuczek (2001), p. 282.
  37. ^ "Mary Stover, Bluff City, Sullivan", United States Census, 1880 – via FamilySearch
  38. ^ a b c d "Stover Hall". The Knoxville News-Sentinel. August 22, 1965. p. 55. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  39. ^ "Knoxville Daily Tribune 21 Apr 1883, page 1". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  40. ^ a b "The Johnson Family Burial Plot - Andrew Johnson National Historic Site (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. from the original on 2023-05-09. Retrieved 2023-06-01.
  41. ^ Hoobler, James A. (1979). "Historical News and Notices". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 38 (3): 374–379. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42626009.
  42. ^ "Martha's funeral". Knoxville Sentinel. July 11, 1901. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
  43. ^ Federal writers' project; Pappas, Douglas (1939). Tennessee: a guide to the state, compiled and written by the Federal writers' project of the Work projects administration for the state of Tennessee. American guide series. New York: The Viking Press. p. 319 – via HathiTrust.
  44. ^ "From Records". The Knoxville News-Sentinel. August 22, 1965. p. 55. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  45. ^ Schroeder-Lein & Zuczek (2001), p. 163.
  46. ^ "A Retrospect...Andrew Johnson and His Family". The Journal and Tribune. July 30, 1899. p. 11. Retrieved 2023-07-06.
  47. ^ "Mrs. Martha Patterson obituary". Bolivar Bulletin. July 26, 1901. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  48. ^ "Miss Stover Dead". The Semi-Weekly Knoxville Sentinel. November 9, 1892. p. 8. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  49. ^ a b "Miss Lillie Stover". The Journal and Tribune. November 6, 1892. p. 9. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  50. ^ "East Tennessee Sanitorium". The Journal and Tribune. May 24, 1892. p. 5. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  51. ^ "Tennessee Deaths, 1914-1966," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NSLR-2JC  : 23 February 2021), Mary Johnson in entry for Andrew J. Stover, 25 Jan 1923; Death, Elizabethton, Carter, Tennessee, United States, Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville.
  52. ^ "From White House to Hut of Hermit". Knoxville Sentinel. August 1, 1908. p. 7. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  53. ^ "Andrew Johnson Stover: Hermit Was White House Baby". The Boston Globe. March 8, 1914. p. 72. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  54. ^ "Guest of Judge J. J. McCorkle". The Journal and Tribune. January 4, 1909. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  55. ^ "What Happens to Children of Presidents". St. Joseph Gazette. October 28, 1934. p. 19. Retrieved 2023-06-14.
  56. ^ "Grandson of Andrew Johnson". Nashville Banner. January 28, 1923. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-06-14.

Bibliography edit

  • Holloway, Laura C. (1871). "Mary Stover". The Ladies of the White House. New York: United States Pub. Co. pp. 635–649. LCCN 04013417. OCLC 681133673. OL 13503123M – via HathiTrust (New York Public Library copy).
  • Johnson, Andrew (2000) [1967]. Graf, LeRoy P.; Haskins, Ralph W.; Bergeron, Paul H. (eds.). The Papers of Andrew Johnson. Vol. 16 (May 1869-July 1875). University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 9781572330917.
  • Scott, Samuel W.; Angel, Samuel P (1903). History of the Thirteenth Regiment, Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry, U. S. A.: including a narrative of the bridge burning; the Carter County rebellion, and the loyalty, heroism and suffering of the Union men and women of Carter and Johnson counties, Tennessee, during the Civil War... Philadelphia: P. W. Ziegler. LCCN 03008593. OCLC 771788381. OL 7064017M.
  • Storie, Melanie (2013). The Dreaded Thirteenth Tennessee Union Cavalry: Marauding Mountain Men. Charleston, S.C.: The History Press. ISBN 9781625845665.
  • Schroeder-Lein, Glenna R.; Zuczek, Richard (2001). Andrew Johnson: A Biographical Companion. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-030-7.
  • Trefousse, Hans L. (1989). Andrew Johnson: A Biography (1st ed.). New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0393026736. LCCN 88028295. OCLC 463084977.
  • Watson, Robert P. (2001). First Ladies of the United States. Lynne Rienner Publishers. pp. 116–121. doi:10.1515/9781626373532. ISBN 978-1-62637-353-2. S2CID 249333854.
  • Whipple, Wayne; Longworth, Alice Roosevelt (1937). The Story of the White House and Its Home Life. Boston: Dwinell-Wright Co. LCCN 37005820. OCLC 6334513. OL 6350728M – via Google Books.
  • Winston, Robert W. (1928). Andrew Johnson, Plebeian and Patriot. New York: Henry Holt & Company. LCCN 28007534. OCLC 475518. OL 6712742M – via HathiTrust.

mary, johnson, stover, 1832, april, 1883, daughter, 17th, president, andrew, johnson, wife, eliza, mccardle, stover, three, children, lived, white, house, during, johnson, administration, stover, husband, soldier, union, army, died, during, american, civil, th. Mary Johnson Stover May 8 1832 April 19 1883 was a daughter of 17th U S President Andrew Johnson and his wife Eliza McCardle Stover and her three children lived at the White House during the Johnson administration as Stover s husband a soldier in the Union Army had died during the American Civil War and their East Tennessee homestead had been pillaged by Confederates Stover assisted her older sister Martha Patterson as an acting First Lady of the United States Mary Johnson StoverBorn 1832 05 08 May 8 1832DiedApril 19 1883 1883 04 19 aged 50 Resting placeAndrew Johnson National CemeterySpouse s Daniel Stover William R BrownChildrenEliza Johnson Stover Sarah Drake Stover Andrew Johnson StoverParentsAndrew Johnson father Eliza McCardle Johnson mother Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and first marriage 1 2 White House years 1 3 Second marriage and later life 2 Descendants 2 1 Lillie Stover Maloney 2 2 Sarah Stover Bachman 2 3 Andrew Johnson Stover 3 See also 4 Explanatory notes 5 References 5 1 BibliographyBiography editEarly life and first marriage edit Mary Johnson was born May 8 1832 in the family home on Water Street Greeneville Tennessee the third born of the five children of Andrew and Eliza McCardle Johnson 1 Andrew Johnson who had grown up quite poor and had received a minimal education made a point to send his children to good schools Mary attended Rogersville Female Institute originally Odd Fellows Female Institute in Rogersville Hawkins County Tennessee 2 In 1852 while her father was serving what would be his last of five terms as the Representative of Tennessee s 1st congressional district Mary Johnson married Daniel Stover a farmer from Carter County Tennessee According to the 1928 biography of Andrew Johnson by Winston Stover was a typical blue eyed mountaineer soon to become Colonel of the Fourth Tennessee Union Infantry He was a man of high courage Dan a nephew of Mordecai Lincoln a was the person of all others Andrew Johnson would have selected as a son in law 3 Stover had a fine plantation in the Watauga Valley 3 In 1860 on the cusp of the Civil War the family was living together in Carter County Daniel Stover owned a farm worth US 18 000 equivalent to 610 400 in 2023 and a personal estate worth US 12 000 equivalent to 406 933 in 2023 Their daughter Eliza Johnson Stover age five was attending school Sarah Drake Stover was three years old and the baby Andrew Johnson Stover was two months old 4 nbsp 1853 silhouette of Andrew Martha Mary and Eliza Johnson Tennessee State Museum In June 1861 Daniel Stover was a delegate from Carter County to the pro Union East Tennessee Convention 5 During the first autumn of the American Civil War Stover participated in a guerrilla warfare action called the East Tennessee bridge burnings He was one of four men who knew of the plan prior to the last 24 hours before the attacks were to be executed 6 The November 8 1861 bridge burning was carried out with the approval of Union leaders including Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson and was supposed to clear the way for the occupation of East Tennessee by federal forces Nine bridges were targeted five were destroyed Stover led the raid that successfully destroyed Holston River Bridge at Union Depot also called Zollicoffer now called Bluff City Tennessee 7 However the United States Army did not come marching in to East Tennessee and Confederate Secretary of War Judah Benjamin ordered that any captured bridge burners be put to death To live and fight another day the bridge burners retreated into the hills 8 Stover and his allies lived for months in the Pond Mountains in eastern Carter County 9 nbsp Col Daniel Stover II 1826 1864 farmer slave owner East Tennessee bridge burner and Lincolnite Amidst the ongoing conflict Daniel Stover remained in hiding in the wilderness through the cold and wet winter of 1861 62 while Eliza McCardle Johnson and her youngest son Frank lived with Mary and her children in Carter County 10 Mary Stover and her mother Eliza Johnson prepared daily baskets of provisions baking countless loaves of bread and turning the farm s hogs and beeves into hams and ribs for the men in the hills and their distressed families elsewhere in the county 11 Per Holloway s 1871 Ladies of the White House Most of the men who were with Mr Stover were poor and their families left to the mercy of their enemies would have starved had it not been for the care and generosity of Mrs Stover 11 Stover was eventually permitted to come home on parole due to intercessions on his behalf by Confederate aligned friends 11 In October 1862 the Stovers Eliza and Frank Johnson were driven out of their Carter County home and sent to Murfreesboro 12 After they left the residence and farm buildings were pillaged 13 The Stovers accompanied by Eliza moved around a bit in early 1863 staying for a time in Indiana and in Louisville Kentucky 14 The family travelled together to Nashville arriving May 30 1863 where Col and Mrs Stover Eliza and Andrew Johnson were welcomed by a large crowd 14 However due to chronic health problems from his time in the wilderness Stover did not see much active service in the field and resigned from the United States Army on August 10 1864 due to illness 15 He died at Nashville just before Christmas of that year 16 White House years edit nbsp Stover and her children during their time in the White House Century Magazine 1908 While her older sister Martha Johnson Patterson is generally and rightly named as the de facto First Lady of the Johnson administration Mary Stover was also present at the White House for much but not all 17 of her father s presidency and assisted her sister in managing the household and hosting events 18 For example shortly after his impeachment Andrew Johnson hosted a dinner party for 40 guests Eliza McCardle remained in her room as was her habit but Martha and Mary efficiently took her place as hostesses 19 One reference says that Mary mainly cared for Eliza while Martha typically handled the work of greeting guests 20 Martha and Mary together brought five young children to live at the Executive Mansion and recollections of their energy and strong relationship with grandpa President Johnson are prominent in various recollections of life at the White House Among other things an 1868 birthday party for Andrew Johnson which was organized by the grandchildren was one of only two times that Eliza McCardle ever appeared at a public event during her husband s presidency 21 b The only decoration of the East Room was the erection of a platform for the musicians which was covered with pink tarleton d and festooned with evergreens At each corner stood a flower stand containing beautiful bouquets The musicians were from the marine band At seven o clock Professor Marini 23 dancing master marshalled the children in the long hall and arranged them in couples after which the grand promenade commenced led by a son of General Eastman c and Miss Lily Stover The promenade was succeeded in regular order by the following programme Second quadrille Faust third polka Von Bilse fourth schottische Weverein fifth Lanciers Weingarten sixth gallop John Strauss Intermission During the intermission the juveniles were ushered into the spacious State Dining Room where a magnificent table loaded down with cakes fruits confectionery and flowers and splendidly decorated under the able management of Steward James L Thomas 24 awaited them The happy party at once proceeded to do full justice to the good things provided and for an hour that room contained the merriest throng ever assembled around that festive board Among the number present were the children of the President s family Frank Johnson Andrew Patterson Andrew Stover Lily Stover and Belle Patterson the latter being also generally regarded as the belle of the party 21 The Ladies of the White House 1871 The Stovers spent summers in Tennessee but came back to the White House each fall 25 Mary Stover also left the White House in the capable hands of her sister toward the end of her father s term leaving early to return to Tennessee and set up a household for herself her children and her ailing mother 26 Second marriage and later life edit In 1869 just after the end of her father s presidency Mary Johnson Stover remarried to William Ramsay Brown 1819 1902 a merchant of Greeneville Tennessee 27 Notably Brown s late first wife Mary Sophia Lincoln had been a cousin of Abraham Lincoln through her father Mordecai Lincoln 28 29 d The wedding was a private evening ceremony attended only by family on April 20 1869 26 Two days later Mary Johnson Stover Brown s younger brother Robert Johnson who had long struggled with alcoholism killed himself with an overdose of alcohol and laudanum 31 Circa 1870 a newspaper reporter described Brown as a plain and elderly looking gentleman well to do in the world from dry goods and groceries 32 nbsp Brown and Stover children in the blended family household of William R and Mary J Brown in Greeneville 1870The Browns had a home across the street from the Johnsons in Greeneville 26 However the marriage was unhappy 33 28 After a short period of time the couple were more or less estranged 34 and lived separately Mary spending most of her time at the Stover farm in Carter County Former President and recently elected U S Senator Andrew Johnson died while visiting Mary s home near Elizabethton Tennessee in 1875 although Mary did not attend the funeral because she was caring for her mother 35 Eliza died about six months later in early 1876 Mary waited until both her parents had died to file for divorce in February 1876 33 36 There were rumors that Brown was abusive or mismanaged Stover s children s inheritance although the divorce records only weakly support the latter claim nonetheless the judge granted the divorce within five days of filing Mary used the surname Stover for the remainder of her life 36 nbsp Governor Porter ex Senators Patterson Fowler Dr W R Sevier and other prominent men photographed in front of Brown s Corner also known as Johnson s Block on Main Street in Greeneville on the occasion of ex president Johnson s funeral Brown s Corner may have been the location of William R Brown s businessIn 1880 Mary was living with 23 year old Sarah Stover and two household servants in Union Tennessee Sullivan County 37 As a single mother Stover prospered financially acquiring land in Tennessee and Texas and profiting from her inherited share of the Holston Cotton Mills in Bluff City She built a spacious brick home nearby called Stover House 36 Mary s step daughter in law Lula May visited Stover Hall as a child and described Mary as the handsomest woman I ever saw tall with reddish brown hair 38 Stover died in 1883 at age 50 of tuberculosis 39 leaving most of her estate to her two daughters 36 She is buried near her parents and children at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery in Tennessee 40 Stover House in Bluff City burned in 1906 but many artefacts of the Johnson family were saved from destruction A new home called Long Shadows was built on the foundations 41 William R Brown outlived his ex wife by almost two decades and was a honorary pallbearer at her sister Martha Patterson s funeral in 1901 42 nbsp Abandoned Stover farmhouse photographed c 1935 and described in the 1939 American Guide to Tennessee At 3 3 m on State 91 at the northern end of the bridge is the junction with a graveled road that runs along the river Left on this road to another graveled road leading 0 9 m to the DANIEL STOVER HOUSE R This two story frame house now abandoned stands in the yard of another two story frame house 43 Lincoln Memorial University Libraries via Digital Library of Appalachia Descendants edit indicates individual is buried in family burial plot at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery 40 Eliza Johnson Lillie Stover May 11 1855 November 5 1892 m October 14 1875 to Thomas F Maloney December 6 1846 March 15 1907 no issue Sarah Drake Stover June 27 1857 March 22 1886 m June 7 1881 to William Bruce Bachman November 25 1852 September 9 1922 Andrew Johnson Bachman June 13 1882 January 26 1955 m September 28 1920 to Ethel Crockett Irwin marriage had no issue Samuel Bernard Bachman May 13 1884 April 13 1914 unmarried no issue Andrew Johnson Stover March 6 1860 January 25 1923 unmarried no issueLillie Stover Maloney edit Lillie s husband Thomas Maloney had been at one time a private secretary to Andrew Johnson 44 Around 1874 75 Maloney was a co editor of the Greeneville Intelligencer with Lillie s paternal uncle Frank Johnson who was only three years older than her 45 Lillie and Thomas eventually divorced the marriage had produced no children 46 47 At the time of Lillie s death she was described as Miss Stover 48 After Sarah died Lillie was involved in raising for her two sons who came to love her as a mother 49 Lillie Stover died in November 1892 at age 37 from consumption which has been so fatal in the Johnson family 49 at the East Tennessee Tuberculosis Sanatorium where she had been hospitalized since January 50 Sarah Stover Bachman edit Sarah had two children with husband William B Bachman who was a Tennessee state legislator and delegate to presidential nominating conventions 38 After Sarah died her widower husband married second Lula May Peterson 38 William and Lula had four children of their own they and their descendants preserved Johnson family relics and stories at Long Shadows well into the 1960s 38 Andrew Johnson Stover edit nbsp Andrew Johnson Stover the Hermit of Holston Mountains and His Pet Opossum Boston Globe 1914 Stover s son Andrew Johnson Stover was known as the baby of the White House during his grandfather s presidency At age 13 he suffered a concussive head injury that apparently left him in a state of arrested mental development He became an avid outdoorsman spent time learning skills from Native Americans at a property his mother owned in Texas and ultimately became a mountain hermit He was legally under the guardianship of lawyers in Greeneville but lived independently alone in a hut for decades only coming down from the mountain against his better judgment when his guardians insisted that it was going to snow His mountain redoubt was not far from where his father had lived in hiding during the winter of 1861 62 51 52 53 54 55 Andrew Johnson Stover died at age 63 after a brief bout with pneumonia 56 See also editDolly Johnson Bibliography of Andrew Johnson List of children of presidents of the United StatesExplanatory notes edit Stover s maternal grandmother Phoebe Ward Stover was in laws with the Lincoln family through her sister Mary Ward s marriage to Isaac Lincoln Isaac Lincoln s brother Abraham Lincoln was father of Mordecai Lincoln and paternal grandfather of President Abraham Lincoln In some tellings this made Stover a nephew of Mordecai Lincoln 3 Mrs Johnson also emerged from seclusion for an event for Queen Emma of Hawaii in 1866 22 General Eastman is possibly Seth Eastman In 1827 as justice of the peace Mordecai Lincoln officiated the wedding of Andrew Johnson and Eliza McCardle 30 References edit Winston 1928 p 95 Trefousse 1989 p 73 a b c Winston 1928 p 97 Mary Stover in entry for Daniel Stover United States Census 1860 via FamilySearch page 1 part 1 of E Tennessee convention Brownlow s Tri Weekly Whig June 25 1861 p 1 Retrieved 2023 06 23 Scott amp Angel 1903 p 65 Storie 2013 p 38 Storie 2013 p 42 Storie 2013 p 52 Trefousse 1989 p 150 a b c Holloway 1871 p 636 Trefousse 1989 p 161 Holloway 1871 p 638 a b Trefousse 1989 p 168 Scott amp Angel 1903 p 504 Scott amp Angel 1903 p 510 Crook William H Gerry Margarita Spalding 1908 Andrew Johnson in the White House Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine Scribner amp Company pp 653 669 Obituary for Andrew Johnson Stover Aged 75 The Chattanooga News January 29 1923 p 2 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Trefousse 1989 p 320 Commire Anne ed 2002 Stover Mary Johnson 1832 1883 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Waterford Connecticut Yorkin Publications ISBN 0 7876 4074 3 a b Holloway 1871 p 644 645 Watson 2001 p 120 Professor Marini Evening Star October 21 1863 p 1 Retrieved 2023 06 15 via Newspapers com Administrative History 1791 1983 The White House amp President s Park PDF U S National Park Service n d p 110 Holloway 1871 p 642 a b c Holloway 1871 p 649 William Ramsay Brown www familysearch org Retrieved 2023 06 09 a b History of the Lincoln Family An Account of the Descendants of Samuel Lincoln of Hingham Massachusetts 1637 1920 Commonwealth Press 1923 p 351 ISBN 978 0 598 80583 6 Mary Sophia Lincoln www familysearch org Retrieved 2023 06 09 Trefousse 1989 p 28 Collection Andrew Johnson Papers scout lib utk edu Retrieved 2023 06 16 Andy Johnson in his Rural Home Nashville Union and American December 23 1870 p 3 Retrieved 2023 07 06 a b Trefousse 1989 p 358 Johnson 2000 p 494 Trefousse 1989 p 377 a b c d Schroeder Lein amp Zuczek 2001 p 282 Mary Stover Bluff City Sullivan United States Census 1880 via FamilySearch a b c d Stover Hall The Knoxville News Sentinel August 22 1965 p 55 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Knoxville Daily Tribune 21 Apr 1883 page 1 Newspapers com Retrieved 2023 06 16 a b The Johnson Family Burial Plot Andrew Johnson National Historic Site U S National Park Service www nps gov Archived from the original on 2023 05 09 Retrieved 2023 06 01 Hoobler James A 1979 Historical News and Notices Tennessee Historical Quarterly 38 3 374 379 ISSN 0040 3261 JSTOR 42626009 Martha s funeral Knoxville Sentinel July 11 1901 p 1 Retrieved 2023 08 02 Federal writers project Pappas Douglas 1939 Tennessee a guide to the state compiled and written by the Federal writers project of the Work projects administration for the state of Tennessee American guide series New York The Viking Press p 319 via HathiTrust From Records The Knoxville News Sentinel August 22 1965 p 55 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Schroeder Lein amp Zuczek 2001 p 163 A Retrospect Andrew Johnson and His Family The Journal and Tribune July 30 1899 p 11 Retrieved 2023 07 06 Mrs Martha Patterson obituary Bolivar Bulletin July 26 1901 p 1 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Miss Stover Dead The Semi Weekly Knoxville Sentinel November 9 1892 p 8 Retrieved 2023 06 14 a b Miss Lillie Stover The Journal and Tribune November 6 1892 p 9 Retrieved 2023 06 14 East Tennessee Sanitorium The Journal and Tribune May 24 1892 p 5 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Tennessee Deaths 1914 1966 database with images FamilySearch https familysearch org ark 61903 1 1 NSLR 2JC 23 February 2021 Mary Johnson in entry for Andrew J Stover 25 Jan 1923 Death Elizabethton Carter Tennessee United States Tennessee State Library and Archives Nashville From White House to Hut of Hermit Knoxville Sentinel August 1 1908 p 7 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Andrew Johnson Stover Hermit Was White House Baby The Boston Globe March 8 1914 p 72 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Guest of Judge J J McCorkle The Journal and Tribune January 4 1909 p 3 Retrieved 2023 06 14 What Happens to Children of Presidents St Joseph Gazette October 28 1934 p 19 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Grandson of Andrew Johnson Nashville Banner January 28 1923 p 1 Retrieved 2023 06 14 Bibliography edit Holloway Laura C 1871 Mary Stover The Ladies of the White House New York United States Pub Co pp 635 649 LCCN 04013417 OCLC 681133673 OL 13503123M via HathiTrust New York Public Library copy Johnson Andrew 2000 1967 Graf LeRoy P Haskins Ralph W Bergeron Paul H eds The Papers of Andrew Johnson Vol 16 May 1869 July 1875 University of Tennessee Press ISBN 9781572330917 Scott Samuel W Angel Samuel P 1903 History of the Thirteenth Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry U S A including a narrative of the bridge burning the Carter County rebellion and the loyalty heroism and suffering of the Union men and women of Carter and Johnson counties Tennessee during the Civil War Philadelphia P W Ziegler LCCN 03008593 OCLC 771788381 OL 7064017M Storie Melanie 2013 The Dreaded Thirteenth Tennessee Union Cavalry Marauding Mountain Men Charleston S C The History Press ISBN 9781625845665 Schroeder Lein Glenna R Zuczek Richard 2001 Andrew Johnson A Biographical Companion ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 030 7 Trefousse Hans L 1989 Andrew Johnson A Biography 1st ed New York W W Norton ISBN 0393026736 LCCN 88028295 OCLC 463084977 Watson Robert P 2001 First Ladies of the United States Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 116 121 doi 10 1515 9781626373532 ISBN 978 1 62637 353 2 S2CID 249333854 Whipple Wayne Longworth Alice Roosevelt 1937 The Story of the White House and Its Home Life Boston Dwinell Wright Co LCCN 37005820 OCLC 6334513 OL 6350728M via Google Books Winston Robert W 1928 Andrew Johnson Plebeian and Patriot New York Henry Holt amp Company LCCN 28007534 OCLC 475518 OL 6712742M via HathiTrust nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Johnson Stover Brown Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Johnson Stover amp oldid 1203067016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.