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  1. Matilda Dodge Wilson (née Rausch; October 19, 1883 – September 19, 1967), was born Matilda Rausch in Walkerton, Ontario, Canada. Ranked as one of the wealthiest women in the world, Dodge-Wilson was the widow of John Francis Dodge, who co-founded the Dodge motor car company in Detroit with his brother Horace Elgin Dodge.

  2. Matilda Dodge Wilson was the widow of John Dodge, co-founder of the Dodge Motor Car Company, and the wife of Alfred Wilson, a lumber magnate. She built Meadow Brook Hall, a palatial mansion and farm, and donated it to Michigan State University in 1957.

  3. 23 de mar. de 2023 · Matilda Dodge Wilson was a woman with determination and ambition through her life that would see tragedy and triumph. As a self-made businesswoman, a mother, and natural leader, Matilda found many avenues to use her skills and time to empower women in her communities.

  4. A National Historic Landmark, Meadow Brook Hall is the historic home of one of the automotive aristocracy’s most remarkable women, Matilda Dodge Wilson, her second husband Alfred Wilson, a lumber broker and their four children, Frances and Danny Dodge, and Richard and Barbara Wilson.

  5. 15 de nov. de 2023 · Learn about the life and legacy of Matilda Dodge Wilson, a Canadian-born philanthropist who founded Oakland University with her husband Alfred Wilson. She was also a secretary, a farmer, a banker and a lieutenant governor of Michigan.

  6. Matilda Rausch Dodge Wilson was born in Ontario in 1883, but her family moved to Detroit soon after. In 1907, Matilda married John Dodge, the automotive pioneer, and they bought a 320-acre farm called Meadowbrook near Rochester, Michigan.

  7. 4 de nov. de 2016 · Matilda Dodge Wilson is known as the “begetter of the University” for her leadership in the establishment and preservation of Oakland University. In 1940, she was appointed the 43rd lieutenant governor of Michigan, making her the first woman to serve as a lieutenant governor in the United States.