Margaret Eaton
Margaret Eaton (born Dec. 3, 1799, Washington, D.C.—died Nov. 8, 1879, Washington, D.C.) was a woman whose marriage in 1829 to a prominent Democratic politician caused the famous “cabinet crisis” of U.S. President Andrew Jackson (in which Jackson dismissed his entire cabinet) and led eventually to the succession of Martin Van Buren as head of the party.
The daughter of a Washington tavernkeeper, Peggy O’Neale was married to a navy purser, John B. Timberlake. Throughout the 1820s her name was linked with Tennessee Senator John H. Eaton, a close friend of Jackson. When her husband died in 1828, Eaton, with Jackson’s approval, married her, and Jackson made him secretary of war. A few weeks after the wedding, rumours about her misconduct spread in Washington, and Washington hostesses, including wives of cabinet members, snubbed her—though some observers believed that her major sin lay in her humble social origins. President Jackson was outraged when the wife of Vice President John C. Calhoun took the lead in Peggy’s ostracism. Van Buren, then secretary of state and a widower, made a point of being gracious to her, and his stock rose with the president as Calhoun’s fell. It was the beginning of the estrangement between Jackson and Calhoun, a break that was finalized when Jackson reorganized his cabinet in 1831 and dropped three Calhoun supporters from it. Jackson chose Van Buren to run for vice president in 1832 and supported him for president four years later.
Eaton resigned from the cabinet in 1831, but he and his wife enjoyed the brilliant society of Madrid when he served there as U.S. minister (1836–40). After his death (1856) Peggy Eaton married a young Italian dancing master, Antonio Buchignani, who within a few years defrauded her of her property and ran off with her granddaughter.