"I knew he'd be acquitted; I knew it," declared Eliza McCardle Johnson, told how
the Senate had voted in her husband's impeachment trial. Her faith in him had
never wavered during those difficult days in 1868, when her courage dictated
that all White House social events should continue as usual.
That faith began to develop many years before in east Tennessee, when Andrew
Johnson first came to Greeneville, across the mountains from North Carolina, and
established a tailor shop. Eliza was almost 16 then and Andrew only 17; and
local tradition tells of the day she first saw him. He was driving a blind pony
hitched to a small cart, and she said to a girl friend, "There goes my beau!"
She married him within a year, on May 17, 1827.
Eliza was the daughter of Sarah Phillips and John McCardle, a shoemaker.
Fortunately she had received a good basic education that she was delighted to
share with her new husband. He already knew his letters and could read a bit, so
she taught him writing and arithmetic. With their limited means, her skill at
keeping a house and bringing up a family--five children, in all--had much to do
with Johnson's success.
He rose rapidly, serving in the state and national legislatures and as
governor. Like him, when the Civil War came, people of east Tennessee remained
loyal to the Union; Lincoln sent him to Nashville as military governor in 1862.
Rebel forces caught Eliza at home with part of the family. Only after months of
uncertainty did they rejoin Andrew Johnson in Nashville. By 1865 a soldier son
and son-in-law had died, and Eliza was an invalid for life.
Quite aside from the tragedy of Lincoln's death, she found little pleasure in
her husband's position as President. At the White House, she settled into a
second-floor room that became the center of activities for a large family: her
two sons, her widowed daughter Mary Stover and her children; her older daughter
Martha with her husband, Senator David T. Patterson, and their children. As a
schoolgirl Martha had often been the Polks' guest at the mansion; now she took
up its social duties. She was a competent, unpretentious, and gracious hostess
even during the impeachment crisis.
At the end of Johnson's term, Eliza returned with relief to her home in
Tennessee, restored from wartime vandalism. She lived to see the legislature of
her state vindicate her husband's career by electing him to the Senate in 1875,
and survived him by nearly six months, dying at the Pattersons' home in 1876.