Ney, Elisabet
Franzisca Bernadina Wilhelmina Elisabet Ney, one of the first professional sculptors in Texas and the first in Austin, was born in Münster, Westphalia, on January 26, 1833, to Johann Adam and Anna Elizabeth (Wernze) Ney, a Catholic stonecarver/sculptor and his wife. Ney was the first female student to enter and graduate from the Munich Academy of Art in 1852. She went on to study, on full scholarship, at the Berlin Academy under Christian Daniel Rauch, a leading sculptor in Europe during the mid-nineteenth century. Following her studies under Rauch, she traveled thoughout Europe and was commissioned to complete the busts of several well-known figures including Jacob Grimm, Alexander von Humboldt, Arthur Shopenhauer, Giuseppe Garibaldi, Otto von Bismarck and King Ludwig II of Bavaria.
Ney married Scottish scientist and physician Edmund Duncan Montgomery on November 7, 1863 in Madeira, Portugal. An early feminist, Ney insisted on using her maiden name throughout her married life. Her husband always referred to her in conversation as "Miss Ney". In 1871, they immigrated to the United States and settled in Thomasville, Georgia, where their two sons, Arthur and Lorne, were born. In 1873, following the death of their son, Arthur, they purchased Liendo Plantation in Hempstead, Waller County, Texas. For the next twenty years, Ney managed the plantation while her husband pursued his scientific interests.
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2016-08-10 09:08:50 am |
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2016-08-10 09:08:50 am |
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