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  1. Mary Scott Dimmick Harrison (née Lord; April 30, 1858 – January 5, 1948) was the second wife of Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd president of the United States. She was nearly 25 years younger than Harrison, and was the niece of his first wife Caroline Harrison. Biography. Born ...

  2. Mary Dimmick Harrison (30 de abril de 1858 – 5 de enero de 1948) fue la segunda esposa del 23.º presidente de Estados Unidos Benjamin Harrison.. Era casi 25 años más joven que Harrison, y sobrina de su primera mujer. Biografía. Nacida en Honesdale, Pensilvania, como Mary Scott Lord, era hija de Russell Farnham Lord, ingeniero jefe en Delaware and Hudson Canal (más tarde conocido como ...

  3. Dimmick died suddenly on January 14, 1882. Mary was a niece of Caroline Scott Harrison and spent time visiting the family and aided her aunt in Washington, DC. After her aunt’s death in 1892, Mary and Benjamin Harrison corresponded frequently and became very close. Mary and Benjamin married on April 6, 1896. They had one daughter Elizabeth ...

  4. 21 de may. de 2014 · Benjamin Harrison and his second wife, Mary Lord Dimmick created a near-scandal when they married, and the family never forgave them. The Twenty-Third President’s Menage When Benjamin Harrison (1833-1901) came to the White House in 1889, he brought a large extended family: Caroline, his wife of nearly forty years, his grown daughter Mamie and her…

  5. Harrison, Mary Scott Dimmick (1858–1948) Second wife of Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of the U.S. Name variations: Mary Scott Lord; Mary Scott Dimmick; Mary Lord Dimmick; Mary Lord Harrison; Mary Dimmick Harrison. Born Mary Scott Lord on April 30, 1858, in Honesdale, Pennsylvania; died on January 5, 1948, in New York, New York; daughter of Russell Farnham (chief engineer, and later ...

  6. Mary Dimmick Harrison fue la segunda esposa del 23.º presidente de Estados Unidos Benjamin Harrison. Era casi 25 años más joven que Harrison, y sobrina de su primera mujer.

  7. The story of the Benjamin Harrison Papers is largely that of Mrs. Mary Lord Dimmick Harrison’s search for a biographer of her husband. Inquiry about the papers on behalf of the Library of Congress was first made in 1903. After negotiations with several prospective biographers fell through, the first group of Harrison papers was deposited in ...