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In 1912 Widener and her husband traveled with their elder son Harry to Paris, searching for a chef for their new hotel, Philadelphia's Ritz Carlton; for their return voyage to New York they selected the [[RMS Titanic]]. After the ship's collision with an iceberg, "[George] Widener placed his wife and her maid in a lifeboat. The women were rescued by the steamship [[RMS Carpathia]], but George D. Widener and his son Harry both went down with the ship." (According to her ''New York Times'' obituary Widener "survived the Titanic by manning the oars in a lifeboat.")
In 1912 Widener and her husband traveled with their elder son Harry to Paris, searching for a chef for their new hotel, Philadelphia's Ritz Carlton; for their return voyage to New York they selected the [[RMS Titanic]]. After the ship's collision with an iceberg, "[George] Widener placed his wife and her maid in a lifeboat. The women were rescued by the steamship [[RMS Carpathia]], but George D. Widener and his son Harry both went down with the ship." (According to her ''New York Times'' obituary Widener "survived the Titanic by manning the oars in a lifeboat.")


Widener later{{when}} donated $2 million to Harvard University (from which Harry Widener had graudated in 1907) for construction of the [[Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library]]. She also{{when}} rebuilt St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia's [[Ogontz, Philadelphia|Ogontz]] neighborhood as a memorial to her first husband, and gave $300,000 to the Hill School (in [[Pottstown, Pennsylvania]], and from which Harry Widener had graduated in 1903) for a general science building in memory of her son.
Widener later{{when}} donated $2 million to Harvard University (from which Harry Widener had graduated in 1907) for construction of the [[Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library]]. She also{{when}} rebuilt St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia's [[Ogontz, Philadelphia|Ogontz]] neighborhood as a memorial to her first husband, and gave $300,000 to the Hill School (in [[Pottstown, Pennsylvania]], and from which Harry Widener had graduated in 1903) for a general science building in memory of her son.


== Second marriage and South American adventures ==
== Second marriage and South American adventures ==

Revision as of 05:47, 14 April 2014

Eleanor Elkins Widener
Children

Eleanor Elkins Widener (later known as Eleanor Elkins Widener Rice; died July 13, 1937) was an American heiress and socialite best remembered for her donation to Harvard of the Widener Memorial Library‍—‌a memorial to her elder son Harry Elkins Widener, who (along with her husband George Dunton Widener) perished in the sinking of the RMS Titanic.

Widener later married Harvard professor Alexander Hamilton Rice, a surgeon and explorer whom she accompanied on a number of expeditions, including one on which she "went further up the Amazon than any white woman had penetrated" and was attacked by cannibals.

She survived the cannibal attack and died in a Paris mercantile establishment in 1937.

Marriage

Widener was the daughter of William Lukens Elkins, whose "vast fortune" was made in Philadelphia-area streetcar lines. In 1883 she married George Dunton Widener, son of her father's business partner, thereby "[uniting] two of the largest fortunes in the city. She was known as one of the city's most beautiful women." They lived in her father-in-law's 110-room mansion in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. Their children were Harry Elkins Widener, George Dunton Widener, Jr., and Eleanor (Widener) Dixon.

Titanic survival and Widener Library

In 1912 Widener and her husband traveled with their elder son Harry to Paris, searching for a chef for their new hotel, Philadelphia's Ritz Carlton; for their return voyage to New York they selected the RMS Titanic. After the ship's collision with an iceberg, "[George] Widener placed his wife and her maid in a lifeboat. The women were rescued by the steamship RMS Carpathia, but George D. Widener and his son Harry both went down with the ship." (According to her New York Times obituary Widener "survived the Titanic by manning the oars in a lifeboat.")

Widener later[when?] donated $2 million to Harvard University (from which Harry Widener had graduated in 1907) for construction of the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library. She also[when?] rebuilt St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia's Ogontz neighborhood as a memorial to her first husband, and gave $300,000 to the Hill School (in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, and from which Harry Widener had graduated in 1903) for a general science building in memory of her son.

Second marriage and South American adventures

At the library's dedication[when?] Widener met Harvard professor Alexander Hamilton Rice, a noted South American explorer. In October, 1915 she married Rice, wearing her "celebrated [$750,000] string of pearls which she saved from the Titanic disaster".[A] She subsequently gave up her Philadelphia home, spending her time in Newport, New York and Paris when not accompanying Rice in his South American explorations.

On a 1920 trip, "she went further up the Amazon than any white woman had penetrated. The party warded off an attack by savages and killed two cannibals in the skirmish. As a result that trip was abandoned on the advice of Indian guides, but the Rices ventured several more times into the jungles." ("Explorer Rice Denies That He Was Eaten By Cannibals", the New York Times later reported.)

In 1937 she died of a heart attack at a Paris store.

Notes

  1. ^ Another string, worth $250,000, went down with the ship.

References