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Flora Payne Whitney

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Occupation
  
patron of the arts

Name
  
Flora Whitney


Role
  
Art collector

Children
  
Whitney Tower


Born
  
July 27, 1897
New York, New York, U.S.

Spouse(s)
  
Roderick Tower (m. 1920-1925) George Macculloch Miller III (m. 1927)

Died
  
July 18, 1986, Glen Cove, New York, United States

Parents
  
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Harry Payne Whitney

Siblings
  
Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney

Grandparents
  
William Collins Whitney, Cornelius Vanderbilt II, Alice Claypoole Gwynne

Similar People
  
Harry Payne Whitney, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, William Collins Whitney, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, Cornelius Vanderbilt II

Flora Payne Whitney, also known as Flora Whitney Miller (July 27, 1897 – July 18, 1986), was an American artist and socialite, art collector, and patron of the arts.

Contents

Early life

Flora Payne Whitney was born on July 27, 1897 and raised in Manhattan. Her father was Harry Payne Whitney (1872–1930), a sportsman and heir to the Whitney family fortune, and her mother was Gertrude Vanderbilt (1875–1942), heiress to a substantial part of the Vanderbilt family fortune. She attended Brearley School in New York and Foxcroft School in Middleburg, Virginia, where she met and became close lifelong friends with the artist Kay Sage.

Career

During World War I, she worked with Ruth Hanna McCormick, wife of Senator Joseph M. McCormick, at the Washington headquarters of the Republican Women's National Executive Committee.

Whitney worked closely with her mother, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney in the founding and endowing of the Whitney Museum of Art in New York. After her mother's death, Whitney served as President of the Museum from 1941 until 1966, and as Chairman from 1966 through 1974. Whitney's daughter and granddaughter remain active in museum affairs to this day.

Personal life

On August 4, 1916, Whitney made her debut at "The Reefs," the Payne-Whitney "cottage" in Newport, Rhode Island. She was escorted by Quentin Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt, although her father did not approve of young Roosevelt. After the United States entered World War I, Quentin enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Service, and became engaged to Whitney before leaving for duty overseas. The glamorous young couple never married, since Quentin was killed in aerial combat in July, 1918. Love letters exchanged between Flora and Quentin while he was at the front were featured in Edward Renehan's book about TR's sons, The Lion's Pride (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).

In 1920, Whitney married Roderick Tower at St. Bartholomew's Church, New York. He was an aviator who had trained with Quentin Roosevelt at Mineola air field on Long Island. Tower was also a stockbroker, and son of U.S. Ambassador to Russia and Germany Charlemagne Tower, Jr. The marriage was a failure, however, due to Tower's drinking and infidelity. Before their divorce in August 1925, they had two children together:

  • Pamela Tower (b. 1921), who married Jay Ketchum Secor (1912–1960) in 1941. They divorced in 1950 and she later married Thomas LeBoutillier (1913–1979)
  • Whitney Tower (1923–1999)
  • In 1927, Whitney married George Macculloch Miller III (d. 1972) in Cairo, Egypt. Miller was an artist and member of the architectural firm of Noel & Miller, from 1930 to 1948, and a grandson of George Macculloch Miller (1832–1917), the founder what would become the United Hospital Fund. The marriage to "Cully" Miller was long and happy, and Whitney had two more children:

  • Flora Miller (b. 1928), who married Michael Henry Irving She later married Sydney Francis Biddle (1918–2004)
  • Leverett Saltonstall Miller (b. 1931)
  • She died on July 18, 1986 at Community Hospital in Glen Cove, L.I.

    Descendants

    Whitney's great-grandson, Josiah Hornblower (son of Whitney Tower's daughter, Alexandra Tower Hornblower Thorne) was featured in the documentary Born Rich.

    References

    Flora Payne Whitney Wikipedia


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