Helen Swift Neilson
Helen Swift Neilson | |
---|---|
Born |
1869 Barnstable, Massachusetts |
Died |
18 June 1945 Chicago |
Helen Swift Neilson (1869 – 1945) was an American writer and art collector.
Neilson was the daughter of the meatpacking entrepreneur Gustavus Franklin Swift. She became the second wife of the British politician and writer Francis Neilson, with whom she founded the weekly paper The Freeman in 1920.[1]
She is perhaps best known for her book about her parents called My Father and My Mother.[2] Neilson died in Chicago.
She bequeathed several notable paintings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art:
- Portrait of Janet Law, by Henry Raeburn
- Portrait of Mrs. Thomas Pechell (Charlotte Clavering, died 1841), by John Hoppner
- Portrait of Thomas Pechell (1753–1826), by John Hoppner
References
- ↑ In Memoriam: Helen Swift Neilson, The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Vol. 4, No. 4 (Jul., 1945), pp. 511-513, on Jstor
- ↑ My Father and My Mother, The Lakeside Press, R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co., Chicago, 1937
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