Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor | |
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Born | Rose Farwell March 7, 1870
Lake Forest, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | April 5, 1918 | (aged 48)
Education | Ferry Hall School |
Alma mater | Lake Forest College |
Occupation(s) | Socialite, sportswoman |
Spouse | |
Children | 4, including Wayne |
Parent(s) |
Charles B. Farwell Mary Eveline Smith Farwell |
Relatives | Anna de Koven (sister) |
Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor (March 7, 1870 – April 5, 1918) was an American sportswoman, bookbinder, suffragist, and socialite, and co-founder of a golf club in Illinois named Onwentsia.
Rose Farwell was born a twin in Lake Forest, Illinois, the daughter of Charles Benjamin Farwell and Mary Eveline Smith Farwell. Her father was a United States Senator from Illinois. She and her older sisters Anna de Koven and Grace were considered fashionable beauties in Chicago society, and all enjoyed various sports. Anna became a novelist, and married composer Reginald de Koven. Grace became the first president of the Art Institute of Chicago. [1]
Rose attended Ferry Hall and Lake Forest College for her schooling. [2] Portraits of Rose Farwell as a young woman were painted by John Elliott and Adolfo Müller-Ury. [3]
Because of Rose's and her new husband's interest in golf, the family arranged for Charles B. MacDonald to design a golf course in 1892. [1] [4] In 1895, Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor and her husband were among the founders of the Onwentsia Club, a golf club in Lake Forest. [5] [6] She won several golf events, owned a racehorse, and played lawn tennis. She was a clubwoman, and served as vice president of the Northside Chicago branch of the Illinois Woman Suffrage League. [2]
The Chatfield-Taylors were also members of the "Little Room", a social gathering of artists, writers, and performers. They kept studios in the Fine Arts Building on Michigan Avenue, where Rose Chatfield-Taylor ran a bookbinding business called the Rose Bindery, "a shop where books were appreciated and clothed in beautiful and appropriate bindings." [2] [3] [7] She learned the craft in Paris, and was a member of the Guild of Bookworkers from 1906 to 1910. [8] She wrote about bookbinding for the Sketch Book magazine. [7]
In 1890, Rose Farwell married wealthy writer, social host, and sportsman Hobart Chatfield-Taylor. [9] Together, they were the parents of three sons and one daughter:
She died in Santa Barbara in 1918, [18] aged 48 years, from pneumonia after an appendectomy. [3] [19] In her memory, her sisters funded a visiting nurse position in Chicago, beginning in the fall of 1918. [20] Her sister's book, A Cloud of Witnesses (1920), recounts Anna de Koven's efforts to contact the spirit of the late Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor. [21]
Anna de Koven.
Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | Rose Farwell March 7, 1870
Lake Forest, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | April 5, 1918 | (aged 48)
Education | Ferry Hall School |
Alma mater | Lake Forest College |
Occupation(s) | Socialite, sportswoman |
Spouse | |
Children | 4, including Wayne |
Parent(s) |
Charles B. Farwell Mary Eveline Smith Farwell |
Relatives | Anna de Koven (sister) |
Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor (March 7, 1870 – April 5, 1918) was an American sportswoman, bookbinder, suffragist, and socialite, and co-founder of a golf club in Illinois named Onwentsia.
Rose Farwell was born a twin in Lake Forest, Illinois, the daughter of Charles Benjamin Farwell and Mary Eveline Smith Farwell. Her father was a United States Senator from Illinois. She and her older sisters Anna de Koven and Grace were considered fashionable beauties in Chicago society, and all enjoyed various sports. Anna became a novelist, and married composer Reginald de Koven. Grace became the first president of the Art Institute of Chicago. [1]
Rose attended Ferry Hall and Lake Forest College for her schooling. [2] Portraits of Rose Farwell as a young woman were painted by John Elliott and Adolfo Müller-Ury. [3]
Because of Rose's and her new husband's interest in golf, the family arranged for Charles B. MacDonald to design a golf course in 1892. [1] [4] In 1895, Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor and her husband were among the founders of the Onwentsia Club, a golf club in Lake Forest. [5] [6] She won several golf events, owned a racehorse, and played lawn tennis. She was a clubwoman, and served as vice president of the Northside Chicago branch of the Illinois Woman Suffrage League. [2]
The Chatfield-Taylors were also members of the "Little Room", a social gathering of artists, writers, and performers. They kept studios in the Fine Arts Building on Michigan Avenue, where Rose Chatfield-Taylor ran a bookbinding business called the Rose Bindery, "a shop where books were appreciated and clothed in beautiful and appropriate bindings." [2] [3] [7] She learned the craft in Paris, and was a member of the Guild of Bookworkers from 1906 to 1910. [8] She wrote about bookbinding for the Sketch Book magazine. [7]
In 1890, Rose Farwell married wealthy writer, social host, and sportsman Hobart Chatfield-Taylor. [9] Together, they were the parents of three sons and one daughter:
She died in Santa Barbara in 1918, [18] aged 48 years, from pneumonia after an appendectomy. [3] [19] In her memory, her sisters funded a visiting nurse position in Chicago, beginning in the fall of 1918. [20] Her sister's book, A Cloud of Witnesses (1920), recounts Anna de Koven's efforts to contact the spirit of the late Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor. [21]
Anna de Koven.