User:Indieuh/sandbox
Early life
[edit]Robert Henry Allerton was born on March 20, 1873, as the second child and only son to Samuel Waters Allerton (1828–1914) and Pamilla Thompson Allerton (1840–1880). Through an entirely paternal line, Robert Henry Allerton was descended from Isaac Allerton, an English Puritan who came to America on the Mayflower in 1620.[1] His father was a self-made man who made his millions in land, livestock, banking, and other commercial enterprises. Robert’s mother died in 1880, five days before his seventh birthday. Two years later, his father married Agnes Thompson, his mother’s younger sister. Agnes Thompson Allerton (1858–1924) became a mother, friend, and cultural mentor for her stepson/nephew. She kindled his interests in literature, music, gardening, and above all, visual arts.
The Allertons lived on Prairie Avenue in Chicago, which was the most fashionable residential street in that city in the late 1800s. The Allertons were neighbors of Marshall Field, the Pullmans, Kimballs, and Armours. Robert attended Allen Academy and Harvard School in Chicago, after which he and friend Frederic Clay Bartlett (1873−1953), were sent east to St. Paul's School, a prestigious college prep school in Concord, New Hampshire. The young Chicagoans decided not to go on to college, but rather to study art in Europe.
From 1894 to 1896 they studied at the Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste (Royal Bavarian Academy of Art) in Munich, Germany and the Académie Julian in Paris. After several years of study in Europe Allerton became dissatisfied with his abilities as an artist, burned his paintings and returned home to Illinois. Frederic Bartlett went on to become a professional artist.
In 1922 Allerton met John Gregg (1899–1986), an orphan and aspiring architect who worked for the society architect David Adler in Chicago during the 1920s. After the stock market crash of 1929 Adler′s work diminished and Gregg came to live at Allerton′s estate as landscape architect and business manager, a salaried position. Allerton and Gregg became lifelong companions. After a change in Illinois law in 1959, Allerton legally adopted Gregg as his son although Gregg didn′t adopt the Allerton surname until after Robert′s death in 1964.[2][3] Following Robert Allerton′s death on December 22, 1964, according to his wishes John scattered his ashes on Lawai Bay, Kauai, Hawaii. When John died on May 1, 1986 his ashes were also scattered on the bay. It is believed that Allerton and Gregg were involved in a homosexual relationship, at a time when American society was not accepting of such relationships. If so, they were closeted.[2][4][5][6] Same-sex adult adoption had been a method of legally establishing relationships utilized by couples in the time before the legalization of same-sex marriages and unions.
- ^ Robert Allerton: The Private Man & the Public Gifts by Martha Burgin and Maureen Holtz, September 2009. pg. 3
- ^ a b Syrett, Nicholas L. (3 January 2012). "Queering Couplehood: Robert & John Allerton and Historical Perspectives on Kinship". Genders 1998-2013. University of Colorado Boulder. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
- ^ Beck, Koa (27 November 2013). "How Marriage Inequality Prompts Gay Partners to Adopt One Another". The Atlantic. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
- ^ Fleeson, Lucinda (7 October 2009). "Robert Allerton: Living well is the best revenge - Gay Lesbian Bi Trans News Archive - Windy City Times". www.windycitymediagroup.com. Windy City Media Group. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Syrett2013
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Fleeson, Lucinda. "The Gay '30s". Chicago magazine. Retrieved 27 May 2020.