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Caroline Carmichael McIntosh Fillmore, second wife of 13th United States President Millard Fillmore, died on August 11, 1881 at the age of 67. She was born in Morristown, New Jersey, the daughter of Charles Carmichael and Temperance Blachley Carmichael. She married her first husband, Ezekiel C. McIntosh (1806–1855), a prosperous Troy, New York merchant and President of the Troy Schenectady Railroad in November 1832. They had no children, and McIntosh's death at age 49 left her very wealthy. She married Millard Fillmore on February 10, 1858 in Albany, New York. At the time of their marriage, Caroline required Millard to sign a prenuptial agreement. They lived together for 16 years in a castle-like mansion at 52 Niagara Square and Delaware Avenue (the current site of the Statler Office Building). They are believed to have had a happy marriage (Caroline greatly enjoyed her newfound status as the wife of a former President), though in the 1860s her mental and physical health began to decline. Her husband's sudden death in 1874 (he had enjoyed relatively good health—especially when compared to hers—until just shortly before his fatal stroke) only succeeded in making her more infirm, eccentric, and temperamental. Caroline survived the former president for seven years and was awarded a presidential widow's pension privilege by Congress. In her final years, she frequently changed her will, and upon her death, suits were initiated by various members of the Fillmore family contesting her directives. Caroline Carmichael McIntosh Fillmore is buried alongside her second husband, President Millard Fillmore, his first wife Abigail, as well as Millard and Abigail’s two children in section F in Forest Lawn.