Arabella Duval Huntington

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Arabella Duval Huntington (Yarrington)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Richmond, Virginia, United States
Death: September 16, 1924 (72)
New York, New York County, New York, United States
Place of Burial: 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, Los Angeles County, California, 91108, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Richard M. Yarrington and Catherine J. Maddox / Yarrington
Wife of John A. Worsham; Collis Potter Huntington and Henry E. Huntington
Mother of Archer Milton Huntington and Henry Huntington, II
Sister of Eliza Page Ashburn; Emma J. Yarrington; Alfred M Yarrington; Catharine Yarrington; Richard Milton Yarrington and 1 other

Managed by: Caitlin Daniell Clark
Last Updated:

About Arabella Duval Huntington

Arabella Duval Huntington (Yarrington)

Arabella was an American philanthropist and once known as the richest woman in the country as a result of inheritances she received upon the deaths of her husbands. She was the force behind the art collection that is housed at the Huntington Library in California.

She was the second wife of Collis Potter Huntington, an American railway tycoon and industrialist. After his death, she married his nephew, Henry Edward Huntington, also a railway magnate, and founder of the Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, in San Marino, California.

Biography

Information about her early life is scarce. She was born Arabella Duval Yarrington in 1850 or 1851, probably in Richmond, Virginia (see Wark, p. 312). For the 1921 passenger list for the ship Aquitania, sailing from Cherbourg to New York, Arabella Huntington said she was born in Mobile, Alabama, on February 9, 1851. During her second marriage, in 1913 in Paris, she said she was born in Union Springs, Alabama, on June 1, 1857.

She moved north with a Mr. Worsham, also of Virginia, said to be married with children. He died shortly after they were married, leaving her with their young son Archer, who was born about 1870. (Some sources have suggested that the pair were never married and that she was Worsham's mistress). In 1877, she purchased some property in New York, which was later sold to John D. Rockefeller.

In New York, she worked to care for the ailing wife of Collis Potter Huntington, a wealthy industrialist and railway magnate whom she may have met in Richmond. Collis Huntington's wife died in 1884 in New York. He married Arabella that year, in San Francisco, California.

After they married, Collis Huntington legally adopted Archer, who by then was 14 years old. (It has been suggested that Collis was Archer's biological father.

When Collis Huntington died in 1900, both Arabella and Archer inherited money from him. She is said to have inherited more than $50 million.

In 1913, she married Henry E. Huntington, a nephew of her late husband, who was also a railway magnate and influential in the Los Angeles area. She was his second wife. The couple were together until her death in 1924. Both are buried on the grounds of the Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, in San Marino, California.

Huntington Fund for Cancer Research

In 1902, Huntington gave $100,000 to General Memorial Hospital in memory of her husband to establish the first cancer research fund in the country, the Huntington Fund for Cancer Research. The hospital developed as the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

A memorial to Arabella Huntington was installed in the west wing of the Huntington Library building. It was dedicated in 1927, the year of Henry's death.

Art Collection

Throughout her life, Huntington collected art, jewelry, antiques, and other luxury items. Her particular interests were in Old Masters, Medieval and Renaissance devotional images, and Louis XIV–Louis XV furniture and decorative arts.

At her death, her entire fortune and collections went to her son Archer Huntington. He donated many of her paintings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. These included two Rembrandts, a Vermeer, and several hundred other paintings, most of which had belonged to her husband Collis. The majority of the contents of her primary residence on W. 57th St., including most of the artwork, was sent to auction. Many of the family's other belongings, including clothing, furniture, tapestries, and porcelain, were bequeathed to other institutions including Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and the California Palace of the Legion of Honor art museum in San Francisco.

Some items are held within the collections of the Huntington Library. These were selected for an exhibition about Arabella Huntington in the spring of 2006, entitled The Belle of San Marino. Only the small collection of Medieval and Renaissance paintings at the Huntington Library were in Arabella's own private collection. Henry Huntington purchased these after her death from an auction set up by her son Archer.

The remainder of the objects in the 'Arabella Memorial Collection' at the Huntington were purchased after her death by Henry Huntington. They represent the types of objects she formerly owned, but are not the objects themselves.

Personal Life

Arts and Culture

Arabella took voice lessons from celebrated voice teacher Emilio Belari whose other pupils included the famed soprano Lillian Nordica and other society women of New York, including Louise Whitfield Carnegie. Her son Archer Milton Huntington shared her love for art and culture and was a patron of museums. He was also one of the world's leading experts on Spanish poetry and was the founder of the Hispanic Society of America in New York City.

Death

Arabella Huntington died in New York City on September 16, 1924. She is buried at the Huntington Library's Mausoleum in San Marino, California. Her husband Henry Huntington was buried there three years later after his death.
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Arabella Duval Yarrington was born in the early 1850s, a daughter of Catherine J. and Richard Milton Yarrington, a machinist who died in Richmond in 1859. In the late 1860s she moved with her family to New York, where on March 10, 1870, she gave birth to a son, Archer Milton Worsham, to whom she would remain intensely devoted for the rest of her life.

Endowed with beauty, intelligence, and magnetic charm, she attracted the interest of the wealthy New York railroad magnate Collis Potter Huntington. It was presumably Huntington's seed money that she parlayed into millions of dollars in the late 1870s and 1880s, chiefly through real estate and securities transactions that pitted her against William H. Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, and other prominent New York powerbrokers.

She devoted large sums to art collecting, filling her house on West 54th Street with progressive French landscapes by the Barbizon school and Aesthetic Movement furnishings by Herter Brothers. After years of rumors, she finally married the recently widowed Collis Huntington on July 12, 1884. During their marriage, she spent long periods in Europe, where she made extensive art acquisitions. The tremendous fortune she inherited on her husband's death in 1900 enabled her to shift her collecting to Old Master paintings, chiefly seventeenth-century Dutch, eighteenth-century French, and early Italian.

Most notably, in 1907 she purchased (through the art dealer Joseph Duveen) $2.5 million worth of fine and decorative arts from the Rodolph Kann Collection. She was also a motivating force behind the British paintings collection formed by her deceased husband's nephew, Henry E. Huntington, whom she married at the American Church in Paris on July 16, 1913.

She took great interest in the botanical gardens at her second husband's house in San Marino, California, but continued to gravitate toward New York. Her generous philanthropic gifts (almost all in memory of Collis Huntington), benefited such institutions as the Harvard Medical School, the Hampton Institute, the City of San Francisco, The American Geographical Society, and The Hispanic Society of America.

Following a long period of illness, she died in New York, on September 16, 1924.

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Arabella Duval Huntington's Timeline

1852
June 1, 1852
Richmond, Virginia, United States
1924
September 16, 1924
Age 72
New York, New York County, New York, United States
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Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens Mausoleum, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, Los Angeles County, California, 91108, United States