Lou Henry Hoover
E8107
Lou Henry Hoover was an American First Lady, geologist, and humanitarian known for her advocacy of women's education and her active public role during Herbert Hoover's presidency.
Statements (48)
| Predicate | Object |
|---|---|
| instanceOf |
First Lady of the United States
→
geologist → human → humanitarian → |
| advocatedFor |
public service
→
volunteerism → women's education → |
| associatedWith |
Hoover Institution
→
Republican Party → |
| birthName | Lou Henry → |
| countryOfCitizenship | United States of America → |
| educatedAt | Stanford University → |
| familyName | Hoover → |
| fieldOfWork |
education advocacy
→
geology → humanitarianism → |
| fullName | Lou Henry Hoover → |
| genreOfActivity |
philanthropy
→
public speaking → |
| givenName | Lou → |
| hasRelative | Herbert Hoover → |
| hasRole | First Lady during the Great Depression → |
| knownFor | translating a mining engineering text from Latin with Herbert Hoover → |
| languagesSpokenWrittenOrSigned |
Chinese
→
English → |
| marriedToUSPresident | Herbert Hoover → |
| memberOf | Girl Scouts of the USA → |
| notableFor |
active public role as First Lady
→
modernizing the role of First Lady → support of women's higher education → |
| notableWork |
advocacy of women's education
→
humanitarian relief activities → support for Girl Scouts of the USA → |
| occupation |
First Lady
→
geologist → humanitarian → |
| partnerInWork | Herbert Hoover → |
| placeOfActivity |
China
→
United States of America →
surface form: "United States"
|
| positionHeld |
First Lady of the United States
→
President of the Girl Scouts of the USA → |
| religion |
Religious Society of Friends
→
surface form: "Quakerism"
|
| residence |
Palo Alto, California
→
Stanford, California → Washington, D.C. → White House → |
| sexOrGender | female → |
| spouse | Herbert Hoover → |
Referenced by (14)
Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.
Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, West Branch, Iowa, United States
→
burialPlaceOf
→
Lou Henry Hoover
→
subject surface form: "Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum"