Anna Hartwell Lusk (January 8, 1870 – August 21, 1968) was an American socialite during the Gilded Age.[1]
Early life
Anna Hartwell Lusk was born in New York City on January 8, 1870, the daughter of Prof. William Thompson Lusk[2] and Mary Hartwell (née Chittenden) Lusk.[3]
Her mother died, aged 31, when Anna was 1 year old. A 13-day-old sister, Lily Adams Lusk, died in September 1871, a year and a half after Anna's birth. Chittenden Memorial Library at Yale University was built in honor of Anna's mother.[2] Among her surviving siblings were elder brother was Dr. Graham Lusk (a physiologist and nutritionist), who married Mary Woodbridge Tiffany (a daughter of Louis Comfort Tiffany); Mary Elizabeth Lusk, who married journalist and author Cleveland Moffett; and Dr. William Chittenden Lusk, who, like Anna, did not marry. Her father was an Adjutant-General in the United States Volunteers during the Civil War.[4]
Her maternal grandparents were Mary Elizabeth (née Hartwell) Chittenden[a] and U.S. RepresentativeSimeon B. Chittenden.[5] Her paternal grandparents were Sylvester Graham Lusk and Elizabeth Freeman Lusk (née Adams).[6]
Society life
In 1892, Anna, listed as "Miss Lusk",[1] was included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred", purported to be an index of New York's best families, published in The New York Times.[7] Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom.[8][9]
In 1907, Lusk purchased land from the Paul Smith Hotel Company and hired architect Grosvenor Atterbury to design a "camp" for her, in the Queen Anne style,[10] on Upper St. Regis Lake in New York's Adirondack mountains, adjoining the camp of her brother, known as "Camp Comfort" in Brandreth Park.[11][12] The camp, which was opened in 1908,[13] "[was to] be one of the most elaborate and extensive of the entire chain of lakes"[14] and featured a two-story living hall with a "monumental fieldstone fireplace."[11] Anna sold the camp to Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Chase of New York around 1921.[15]
^Mary Elizabeth (née Hartwell) Chittenden (1815–1852), was the daughter of Sherman Hartwell, himself the nephew of American founding fatherRoger Sherman and his first wife, Elizabeth (née Hartwell) Sherman.