Sarah Stover
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Mary Johnson Stover (May 8, 1832 – April 19, 1883) was a daughter of 17th U.S. President
Andrew Johnson Andrew Johnson (December 29, 1808July 31, 1875) was the 17th president of the United States, serving from 1865 to 1869. He assumed the presidency as he was vice president at the time of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Johnson was a Dem ...
and his wife
Eliza McCardle Eliza Johnson (née McCardle; October 4, 1810 – January 15, 1876) was the first lady of the United States from 1865 to 1869. She served as the second lady of the United States in 1865. She was the wife of Andrew Johnson, the 17th president o ...
. 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 East Tennessee is one of the three Grand Divisions of Tennessee defined in state law. Geographically and socioculturally distinct, it comprises approximately the eastern third of the U.S. state of Tennessee. East Tennessee consists of 33 count ...
homestead had been pillaged by Confederates. Stover assisted her older sister
Martha Patterson Martha Johnson Patterson (—) was the eldest child of Andrew Johnson, the 17th President of the United States and his wife, Eliza McCardle. She served as the White House hostess during her father's administration and directed the restoration of ...
as an acting First Lady of the United States.


Biography


Early life and first marriage

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. 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. 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 Daniel Stover (November 26, 1826 – December 18, 1864) was an American farmer in Tennessee. He was a son-in-law of Andrew Johnson (who became president of the United States in 1865). Stover was one of the leaders of the East Tennessee bridge burn ...
, 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, was the person of all others Andrew Johnson would have selected as a son-in-law." Stover had a "fine plantation" in the Watauga Valley. In 1860, on the cusp of the Civil War, the family was living together in Carter County. Daniel Stover owned a farm worth and a personal estate worth . 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. In June 1861, Daniel Stover was a delegate from Carter County to the pro-Union
East Tennessee Convention The East Tennessee Convention was an assembly of Southern Unionist delegates primarily from East Tennessee that met on three occasions during the Civil War. The Convention most notably declared the secessionist actions taken by the Tennessee sta ...
. 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. 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. 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. Stover and his allies lived for months in the Pond Mountains in eastern Carter County. 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. 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. 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." Stover was eventually permitted to come home "on parole" due to intercessions on his behalf by Confederate-aligned friends. In October 1862 the Stovers, Eliza and Frank Johnson were driven out of their Carter County home and sent to Murfreesboro. After they left, the residence and farm buildings were pillaged. The Stovers, accompanied by Eliza, moved around a bit in early 1863, staying for a time in Indiana and in Louisville, Kentucky. 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. 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. He died at Nashville just before Christmas of that year.


White House years

While her older sister
Martha Johnson Patterson Martha Johnson Patterson (—) was the eldest child of Andrew Johnson, the 17th President of the United States and his wife, Eliza McCardle. She served as the White House hostess during her father's administration and directed the restoration of ...
, is generally, and rightly, named as the ''de facto''
First Lady First lady is an unofficial title usually used for the wife, and occasionally used for the daughter or other female relative, of a non-monarchical A monarchy is a form of government in which a person, the monarch, is head of state fo ...
of the Johnson administration, Mary Stover was also present at the White House for much (but not all) of her father's presidency, and assisted her sister in managing the household and hosting events. 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." One reference says that Mary mainly cared for Eliza while Martha typically handled the work of greeting guests. 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. The Stovers spent summers in Tennessee but came back to the White House each fall. 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.


Second marriage and later life

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. (Notably, Brown's late first wife, Mary Sophia Lincoln, had been a cousin of Abraham Lincoln through her father Mordecai Lincoln.) The wedding was a private evening ceremony, attended only by family, on April 20, 1869. 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 Laudanum is a tincture of opium containing approximately 10% powdered opium by weight (the equivalent of 1% morphine). Laudanum is prepared by dissolving extracts from the opium poppy (''Papaver somniferum Linnaeus'') in alcohol (ethanol). Red ...
. 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." The Browns had a home across the street from the Johnsons in Greeneville. However, the marriage was unhappy. After a short period of time, the couple were "more or less estranged" 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. Eliza died about six months later, in early 1876; Mary waited until both her parents had died to file for divorce in February 1876. 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. In 1880, Mary was living with 23-year-old Sarah Stover and two household servants in Union, Tennessee (Sullivan County). 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. 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." Stover died in 1883 at age 50, of tuberculosis, leaving most of her estate to her two daughters. She is buried near her parents and children at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery in Tennessee. 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. 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.


Descendants

† indicates individual is buried in family burial plot at Andrew Johnson National Cemetery * 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

Lillie's husband Thomas Maloney had been at one time a private secretary to Andrew Johnson. 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). Lillie and Thomas eventually divorced; the marriage had produced no children. At the time of Lillie's death she was described as Miss Stover. After Sarah died, Lillie was involved in raising for her two sons, who "came to love her as a mother." Lillie Stover died in November 1892 at age 37, from consumption, which has been "so fatal in the Johnson family" at the East Tennessee Tuberculosis Sanatorium, where she had been hospitalized since January.


Sarah Stover Bachman

Sarah had two children with husband William B. Bachman, who was a Tennessee state legislator and delegate to presidential nominating conventions. After Sarah died, her widower husband married second, Lula May Peterson. 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.


Andrew Johnson Stover

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. Andrew Johnson Stover died at age 63 after a brief bout with pneumonia.


See also

*
Dolly Johnson Dolly Johnson (born late 1820s, died after 1887), in later life known as Aunt Dolly, was a small-business owner and domestic worker, remembered in Greeneville, Tennessee as one of the best cooks in the region. Andrew Johnson, who became the 17t ...
* Bibliography of Andrew Johnson *
List of children of presidents of the United States The following people are children of U.S. presidents, including stepchildren and alleged illegitimate children. All full names with married names are given except for Theodore Roosevelt III and Herbert Charles Hoover. Currently there are 33 co ...


Explanatory notes


References


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Stover, Mary Johnson 1832 births 1883 deaths 19th-century American women Children of Andrew Johnson People from Greeneville, Tennessee Children of presidents of the United States Children of vice presidents of the United States Acting first ladies of the United States Burials in Tennessee Women in the American Civil War 19th-century deaths from tuberculosis Tuberculosis deaths in Tennessee