(O’Brien)
Mumler, William H.
Murray, William Vans
National Enquire r
National First Ladies’ Library
New York City
New York Time s
Nirdlinger, Charles F.
Nixon, Julie (later Eisenhower)
Nixon, Pat
Nixon, Richard M.
Norris, Basil
Noyan treatments
Obama, Michelle
O’Brien, Michael
Onassis, Aristotle
Ord, Mary
O’Reilly, Robert M.
Orman, Ben
Osler, William
osteoarthritis
Packard, Francis Appleton
Packard, Randall M.
pancreatitis, B. Ford’s
Paracelsus
partnership patterns
Payne, Anna
Payne, Dorothea
phenobarbital
Philadelphia, yellow fever epidemics
Phillips, Dr.
phrenology
Physick, Philip Synge
Pierce, Benny
Pierce, Frank Robert
Pierce, Franklin
Pierce, Franklin, Jr.
Pierce, Jane Appleton
Pillsbury, Stanley
Plasmodium spp.
Platt, Emily (later Hayes)
pneumonia
Pocahontas
political advisor role, during the 1800s
political advisor role, during the 1900s
Polk, Gustavus
Polk, James
Polk, Sarah (earlier Childress)
Portman, Dr.
Powel, Elizabeth Willing
Powers, Abigail (later Fillmore)
prednisone
preeclampsia
pregnancies, during the 1800s
pregnancies, during the 1900s
The Presidents’ Wives (Watson)
Preston, Thomas Jex
Princeton, explosion
professions/occupations, before White House
quinine treatments
Radcliffe, Donnie
Randolph, Edmund
rankings: First Lady
Reagan, Nancy (earlier Robbins, then Davis)
Reagan, Patti
Reagan, Ron
Reagan, Ronald
Reed, Walter
Reeves, Thomas
Regula, Mary
Regula, Ralph
respiratory ailments
rheumatic fever, M. Eisenhower’s
rheumatism/rheumatoid arthritis
Richardson, Charles W.
Riley, Dr.
Riley, James Whitcomb
Rixey, Presley Marion
Robb, George
Robbins, Edith (earlier Luckett, later Davis)
Robbins, Nancy (later Davis, then Reagan)
Rockefeller, Happy
Rolfe, John
Rolfe, Thomas
Roosevelt, Alice Hathaway (earlier Lee)
Roosevelt, Anna
Roosevelt, Edith Kermit Carrow
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Ethel
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Quentin
Roosevelt, Theodore
Ruffin, Sterling
Rush, Benjamin
Ryan, Thelma Catherine “Pat” (later Nixon)
Ryan, Tom
Safire, William
Salinger, Pierre
Sartoris, Algernon
Sartoris, Nellie Grant
Sawyer, Carl
Sawyer, Charles
Sayre, Francis
Sayre, Jesse (earlier Wilson)
Schlesinger, Arthur
Schumer, Charles
Scott, Caroline (later Harrison)
Scott, Henry (friend of McKinleys)
Scott, Henry M. (brother of Caroline Scott, later Harrison)
Scott, John
Scott, Mary
Scott, W.
sepsis, I. McKinley’s
Sewall, Thomas
Seward, William
Shepherd, Jack
similia principle, homeopathy
skin cancer, L. Bush’s
smallpox
Smathers, George
Smith, Abigail “Nabby” (earlier Adams)
Smith, Helen McCain
Smith, James
Smith, Margaret Mackall (later Taylor)
Snow, Tony
Snyder, Howard
social/ceremonial role, during the 1800s
social/ceremonial role, during the 1900s
Spalding, Chuck
spiritualism
squamous cell carcinoma, L. Bush’s
staph infection, J. Coolidge’s
Stephens, Charles
Sternberg, William
Sterrett, William
Stone, Robert K.
strabismus, J. Grant’s
strokes, during the 1800s
strokes, during the 1900s
subdural hematoma, H. Clinton’s
suicidal thoughts/suicides
surgeries
Sydenham, Thomas
Taft, Charles Phelps
Taft, Helen (daughter of Nellie)
Taft, Helen Herron “Nellie,”
Taft, Horace
Taft, Mary-Florence
Taft, Robert
Taft, William Howard
tartar treatments
Taylor, Ann Margaret (later Wood)
Taylor, Margaret Mackall (earlier Smith)
Taylor, Mary Elizabeth “Betty” (later Bliss)
Taylor, Octavia
Taylor, Sarah Knox (later Davis)
Taylor,
Victoria Alexander
John Barnes
Michelle Willingham
Wendy S. Marcus
Elaine Viets
Georgette St. Clair
Caroline Green
Sarah Prineas
Kelsey Charisma
Donna Augustine