Edith Wilson
Edith Bolling Wilson (October 15, 1872 – December 28, 1961) was the second wife of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and served as First Lady from December 1915 to March 1921.[1][2] Born in Wytheville, Virginia, to a family descended from early colonial figures including Pocahontas, she was previously married to Washington, D.C., jeweler Norman Galt from 1896 until his death in 1908.[1][3] Widowed and childless after her first marriage, she wed the widowed Wilson shortly after the death of his first wife, Ellen, in 1914, becoming stepmother to his three daughters.[1] During World War I, Wilson supported the war effort through public campaigns for fuel and food conservation, including planting a White House victory garden, and assisted in selling Liberty Bonds, though her public activities were constrained by traditional expectations of the role.[1] The most defining aspect of her tenure occurred after President Wilson's severe stroke on October 2, 1919, which left him partially paralyzed and cognitively impaired; she then implemented a "stewardship" system, personally screening visitors, correspondence, and decisions, relaying only select matters to her husband and conveying his purported responses, thereby managing executive functions without formally invoking constitutional succession mechanisms.[2][4] This arrangement, which concealed the extent of Wilson's disability from the public and Cabinet for over a year, has generated enduring controversy, with some historians viewing it as a pragmatic shield against political chaos amid debates over the Treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations, while others criticize it as an unconstitutional usurpation of power by an unelected spouse that prioritized personal loyalty over institutional norms.[4][5][6] Following Wilson's death in 1924, Edith Wilson retreated from public life but actively preserved his legacy, co-founding the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, protecting his presidential papers, and occasionally advising on historical matters until her own death at age 89.[7] Her actions during the stewardship period remain a subject of debate regarding the boundaries of spousal influence in governance and the risks of executive incapacity without clear protocols, predating the 25th Amendment by decades.[8][4]