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Elizabeth Crocker Bowers

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Occupation
  
Actress

Siblings
  
Sarah Crocker Conway

Role
  
Actress


Name
  
Elizabeth Bowers

Years active
  
1846–1895

Nieces
  
Marianne Conway

Elizabeth Crocker Bowers

Born
  
March 12, 1830 (
1830-03-12
)
Stamford, Connecticut, United States

Died
  
November 6, 1895, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Spouse
  
JC McCollom (m. 1867), Dr. Brown (m. 1861–1867), David P. Bowers (m. 1847–1857)

Children
  
Harry C. Bowers, Mrs. F. V.(May) Bennett, Walter Bowers

People also search for
  
David P. Bowers, Sarah Crocker Conway, Dr. Brown, JC McCollom, Harry C. Bowers, Walter Bowers

Elizabeth Crocker Bowers (March 12, 1830 – November 6, 1895) was an American stage actress and theatrical manager. She was also known professionally as Mrs. D. P. Bowers.

Contents

Early life

Elizabeth Crocker Bowers was born March 12, 1830 in Stamford, Connecticut, the daughter of an Episcopal clergyman and sister of actress Sarah Crocker Conway (also known as Mrs. F. B. Conway).

Career and marriages

In 1846, she appeared in the character of Amanthis at the Park Theatre in New York City, New York.

On March 4, 1847, she married actor David P. Bowers, and moved to Philadelphia. She appeared as Donna Victoria in A Bold Stroke for a Husband at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia. She became very popular at the Arch Street Theatre, and made Philadelphia her home until her husband's death in 1857.

In December 1857, after a period of retirement from the stage, she leased the Walnut Street Theatre and retained its management until 1859. She then leased the Philadelphia Academy of Music for a short dramatic season.

She married Dr. Brown of Baltimore in 1861. and traveled to London. She made a great success as "Julia" in The Hunchback at the Sadler's Wells Theatre and "Geraldine D'Arcy" in Woman (play) at the Lyceum Theatre in London.

Returning to New York City in 1863, she played for a time at the Winter Garden (now demolished). Among her favorite roles were Juliet, Lady Macbeth, Marie Antoinette, and Lady Audley.

After the death of Dr. Brown in 1867, she married actor J. C. McCollom, with whom she repeated many of her popular roles.

Her subsequent retirement in Philadelphia was interrupted by a return to the stage in October 1886 for several years. She organized a new dramatic company, and visited the principal cities of the U.S., playing many of her old and favorite characters. Under A. M. Palmer's management she appeared in Lady Windermere's Fan (1893), and later she was a supporting actress for Rose Coghlan and Olga Nethersole.

Bowers died of pneumonia and heart failure on November 6, 1895 in at the home of her son-in-law, Frank Bennett, in Washington D.C. She was survived by a daughter, Mrs. F. V.(May) Bennett and two sons, Harry C. Bowers of Portland, OR and Walter Bowers of New York City. She was buried at Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

References

Elizabeth Crocker Bowers Wikipedia


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