Is “Doctor” Jill Biden Channeling Edith Wilson in the Worst Case of Elder Abuse in Recorded History?

Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, the second wife of the 28th President Woodrow Wilson, served as First Lady from 1915 to 1921. After her husband suffered a severe stroke, Edith took on a significant role, effectively managing the Executive branch during the latter part of Wilson’s presidency.

Often referred to as the “Secret President” and the “first woman to run the government,” Edith Wilson’s influence became crucial when her husband was incapacitated by illness. Her early life in Virginia, as the seventh of eleven children born to Sallie White and Judge William Holcombe Bolling, prepared her for her future responsibilities. She spent her formative years in Wytheville and later attended Martha Washington College and a smaller school in Richmond.

In Washington, while visiting her married sister, Edith met and married businessman Norman Galt in 1896. After twelve years of a fulfilling, though childless, marriage and a brief period as a widow, Edith managed her late husband’s jewelry business successfully.

A twist of fate brought Edith into the life of a grieving President Wilson, who found comfort and companionship in her. Their relationship quickly blossomed into love, and they married on December 18, 1915. Their marriage brought a renewed sense of happiness to Wilson, evident to those around them.

As First Lady, Edith’s role transcended social duties, particularly with the outbreak of World War I and the U.S. entry into the conflict in 1917. She dedicated herself to supporting her husband, even traveling with him to Europe for peace negotiations. When Wilson campaigned for the Senate’s approval of the peace treaty and the League of Nations Covenant, his health dramatically declined in September 1919 due to a stroke that left him partially paralyzed. Edith then stepped in to handle many routine governmental tasks, selecting which issues required the president’s attention while delegating others to department heads.

Edith Wilson referred to this period as her “stewardship” and, in her memoir published in 1939, clarified that she was following the doctors’ advice. The Wilsons retired in 1921 to their Washington home, where Woodrow Wilson passed away three years later. Edith remained a respected figure in Washington society, even participating in President Kennedy’s inaugural parade. She passed away on December 28, 1961, coinciding with the anniversary of her husband’s birth.

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