Ellen Axson Wilson
Ellen Louise Axson Wilson (May 15, 1860 – August 6, 1914) was the first wife of Woodrow Wilson, the 28th president of the United States, and served as first lady from March 1913 until her death from Bright's disease while in office.[1][2]
Born in Savannah, Georgia, to a Presbyterian minister, she grew up in Rome, Georgia, and married Wilson in 1885 after meeting him in 1881; the couple had three daughters, and she actively supported his academic career and political ambitions, including writing promotional biographies of him.[1][2]
A trained artist who studied at the Art Students League of New York and held a solo exhibition of her Impressionist-style works in 1911—the first such show by a woman on the verge of becoming first lady—Wilson continued her creative interests amid family demands.[1][2]
In her short time as first lady, she oversaw modest White House redecorations and garden improvements, hosted simple social gatherings, and emerged as an early activist by inspecting squalid alley dwellings in Washington, D.C., leading congressional tours through them, and urging legislation to clear these substandard housing areas—a cause that gained traction posthumously.[1][3][2]