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  1. 2nd Wife of 23rd United States President Benjamin Harrison. Mary Scott Lord was the daughter of Russell Farnham Lord and Elizabeth Mayhew Scott Lord. Her first husband, attorney Walter Erskine Dimmick, (July 4, 1856-January 14, 1882) was the son of the Pennsylvanian attorney-general, but died shortly after their...

  2. Mary Harrison McKee ... Her condition was worsened by suspicions that her husband had begun a romantic relationship with her niece Mary Scott Dimmick . [8]: 192 In respect for her condition, both her husband and his opponent limited thei ...

  3. 2. Mary Scott Harrison McKee (1858 – 1930) 3. An unnamed still born daughter (June, 1861) Years Before the White House (1853 – 1889): Not wishing to live under the Harrison "name", Benjamin Harrison moved Carrie and their meager possessions to Indianapolis, Indiana to make their home. Carrie learned to make do with little, but she was very ...

  4. 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.

  5. Mary Scott McKee (nee Harrison; April 3, 1858 – October 28, 1930) was the acting first lady of the United States for her father Benjamin Harrison.She lived in the White House for the duration of her father's presidency where she worked as an assistant to her mother, first lady Caroline Harrison.

  6. 6, 1896, he married Mary Scott Lord Dimmick, Caroline Scott Harrison’s widowed niece and former secretary. They had one daughter, Elizabeth Harrison, born February 21, 1897. Harrison died on March 13, 1901. Twenty-five years Harrison’s junior, Mary Lord Harrison survived her husband by nearly 47 years, dying on January 5, 1948.

  7. The Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site, located in Indianapolis, Indiana, was home to the United States 23rd president Benjamin Harrison. Open to the public as an educational and historical service, we seek to promote patriotism and citizenship through appropriate educational activities, events, and by artfully exhibiting the Victorian time period as Harrison and his family might have ...