Hillary Diane Rodham
From RoyalWeb
(→Dorothy Emma Howell) |
(→Dorothy Emma Howell) |
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Wikipedia states that "... through her years in high school, she lived with her paternal grandparents in the Los Angeles suburb of Alhambra, California. After graduating from Alhambra High School in 1937, she moved to Chicago where she married Hugh Ellsworth Rodham in 1942." | Wikipedia states that "... through her years in high school, she lived with her paternal grandparents in the Los Angeles suburb of Alhambra, California. After graduating from Alhambra High School in 1937, she moved to Chicago where she married Hugh Ellsworth Rodham in 1942." | ||
− | When Hillary was three, the family moved to the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Illinois. [http://www.hillary-rodham-clinton.org/family.html This article] states they moved to Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas in 1987, "...to be closer to their daughter." | + | Perhaps Dorothy moved back to Chicago to be near her mother. When Hillary was three, the family moved to the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Illinois. [http://www.hillary-rodham-clinton.org/family.html This article] states they moved to Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas in 1987, "...to be closer to their daughter." |
When her husband died, an article in the ''News Record'' of North Hills, Pennsylvania which was mainly about Hillary, reprinted this quote from Dorothy:<blockquote> "There must have been 40 or 50 children within a four-block radius of our house and within four years of Hillary's age," the first lady's mother, Dorothy Rodham, told The Washington Post in January. "They were all together, all the time, a big extended family. There were more boys than girls, lot of playing and competition."</blockquote> | When her husband died, an article in the ''News Record'' of North Hills, Pennsylvania which was mainly about Hillary, reprinted this quote from Dorothy:<blockquote> "There must have been 40 or 50 children within a four-block radius of our house and within four years of Hillary's age," the first lady's mother, Dorothy Rodham, told The Washington Post in January. "They were all together, all the time, a big extended family. There were more boys than girls, lot of playing and competition."</blockquote> |