Helen Taft was the wife of William Howard Taft, the 27th President of the United States of America
@First Lady of the United States, Birthday and Family
Helen Taft was the wife of William Howard Taft, the 27th President of the United States of America
Helen Herron Taft born at
In 1886, at the age of 25, she married William Howard Taft who was a lawyer in Cincinnati and whom she had met at a party in 1880.
The couple was blessed with three children - Robert Taft (Republican Senator from Ohio), Helen Taft (women's rights activist) and Charles Taft (co-founder of the World Council of Churches).
Helen Taft died in Washington, D.C. on May 22, 1943. She was the first wife of an American President to be cremated at Arlington National Cemetery.
Helen Taft was born on 2nd June, 1861 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to John Williamson Herron and Harriet Collins Herron.
Her father, a district attorney, judge and Republican Party activist was at good terms with the then President due to a law partnership with him.
She was the fifth out of the ten siblings and called ‘Nellie’ during childhood.
At the age of six, she was enrolled in Miss Nourse School, Cincinnati, for primary education. She remained there till the age of ten where she was trained in various subjects like history, basic science, arithmetic, mythology etc.
It was during primary education that her inclination towards music and art grew under the guidance of George Schneider at the Nourse School.
Post marriage, Nellie Taft offered voluntarily teaching services in sewing and drawing as part of her mother- in-laws’s kindergarten movement in Cincinnati. Meanwhile, she also worked on art projects focusing on kindergarten learning.
In 1893, Nellie Taft could professionally pursue her love for music after becoming the president of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Association which she managed single handedly while her husband travelled a lot as a circuit court judge.
She was a continuous support to her husband’s career by socially connecting with influential people and pushing her husband to take President Benjamin Harrison’s offer for Federal Circuit Court Judge in 1892. In all this, Nellie Taft was finding an opportunity to fulfill her childhood aspiration of becoming the first lady.
When her husband was made the Governor-General of Philippine Islands, she shifted to Manilla, where she initiated a program, “Drops of Milk”, a nutritional program for infants after.
Nellie Taft earned respect of the people as she learnt about the culture and languages of different regions and promoted natives participation at social events.
She made significant contribution towards the development of the West Potomac Park. The plantation of approx 3000 cherry blossoms all around the park area (Tidal Basin, south and west of Independence Mall, in Washington, D.C.) where the musical concerts took place and people irrespective of race gathered to enjoy it.
Within 11 days of becoming the First Lady, Nellie started to work on the federal working conditions and strove with the cabinet members to improvise them especially for the women workers.
Promoting herself as a “Qualified Suffragist”, she proposed the idea of women voting but only for the ones having considerable knowledge about politics.
Nellie Taft was the first First Lady to publish an autobiography ‘Recollections of Full Years’ in 1914.