Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 1851-1924
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person
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 1851-1924
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Name :
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 1851-1924
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 51-1924
Name Components
Name :
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 51-1924
Huntington, Arabella Duval 1850-1924
Name Components
Name :
Huntington, Arabella Duval 1850-1924
Huntington, Arabella
Name Components
Name :
Huntington, Arabella
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 51-1924 Archives
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Name :
Huntington, Arabella Duval, 1850 or 51-1924 Archives
Huntington, Arabella D. 1850-1924
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Name :
Huntington, Arabella D. 1850-1924
Duval Huntington, Arabella 1850-1924
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Name :
Duval Huntington, Arabella 1850-1924
Yarrington, Arabella 1850-1924
Name Components
Name :
Yarrington, Arabella 1850-1924
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Exist Dates
Biographical History
Philanthropist and art collector Arabella Duval Huntington was the wife of the railroad and shipping magnate, Collis P. Huntington. After his death, Arabella married Collis' nephew, Henry E. Huntington. Both husbands put at Arabella's disposal immense funds for the purchase of works of art. Her purchases later became the foundation for Huntington Library and Art Gallery in California. Aside from her art collecting, Mrs. Huntington spent much of her time immersed in various charitable and humanitarian endeavors.
Arabella Duval Huntington was born in Richmond, Virginia, in 1851. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R.M. Yarrington, raised Arabella in Virginia where she remained until her marriage at the age of eighteen. She married a Mr. Worsham of New York City in 1869 and returned there with him. However, he died a year later, leaving Arabella with an infant son, Archer Milton.* The next fourteen years were spent raising her son and educating him herself. In 1884, she married Collis P. Huntington, railroad builder and financier. Mr. Huntington legally adopted Archer. They lived a very happy life together until his death in 1900.
For the next ten years, Mrs. Huntington tried to carry on her husband's interests, visiting his shipyards and supporting charities in his name. In 1913, she remarried once more. Mutual interests in art attracted her to Collis P. Huntington's nephew, Henry E. Huntington, and after their marriage they traveled extensively in Europe, gathering the materials for what was to be the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery in California. She divided her time between New York and her husband's home in California. She remained active in numerous charities and good works until her death in 1924.
*This history has been questioned. A. Hyatt Mayor, Arabella's nephew, has suggested that Archer Milton was in fact the illegitimate son of Collis Huntington. [RR]
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/63874157
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-nr92034569
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/nr92034569
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q623711
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Languages Used
Subjects
Antiques
Art
Art
Art
Art dealers
Women philanthropists
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Collector
Philanthropists
Legal Statuses
Places
Upper class, United States
AssociatedPlace
California
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>