Sarah Reeve Ladson
Sarah Reeve Ladson | |
---|---|
Born | 1790 Charleston, South Carolina United States |
Died | 1866 |
Other names | Sarah Gilmor (married name) |
Spouse | Robert Gilmor Jr. |
Parent(s) | James Ladson Judith Smith |
Relatives | Ladson family |
Sarah Reeve Ladson (1790-1866)[1] was an American socialite, arts patron, and style icon. Born into a prominent Charleston family, she was an influential member of the South Carolinian planter class. She was regarded as one of the most fashionable American women of her time and was the subject of various portraits and sculptures.
Biography
Ladson was born in
On April 9, 1807, she married Robert Gilmor Jr., a merchant from Baltimore.[6][9] She was his second wife.[10] They had no biological children, but raised their niece, Isabel Ann Baron.[11] They later supported the business endeavors of Isabel's husband, John McPherson Brien.[12][11]
Ladson was prominent in both Charleston and Baltimore
Maurie D. McInnis, an art historian, noted that Ladson "visually made reference to the taste of the slave women around whom she had been raised" with the turban and bright colours portrayed in Sully's portrait of her.[6] Sully's portrait of Ladson has been exhibited in Grandeur Preserved: Masterworks Presented by Historic Charleston Foundation in New York, and Art in America: Three Hundred Years of Innovation in Shanghai and Beijing.[3]
The schooner Sarah Ladson was named after her.[17]
References
- ^ "Sarah Reeve Ladson Gilmor". npg.si.edu. Retrieved 2020-09-26.
- ^ a b "Mrs. Robert Gilmor, Jr. (Sarah Reeve Ladson)". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Cover Girl Revealed". CHARLESTON SC. January 20, 2011.
- ISBN 9780786485284
- ISBN 9780872494800
- ^ ISBN 9781469625997
- ^ The history of Georgetown County, South Carolina, pp. 297, 525, University of South Carolina Press, 1970.
- ^ Suzanne Cameron Linder and Marta Leslie Thacker, Historical Atlas of the Rice Plantations of Georgetown County and the Santee River (Columbia, SC: South Carolina Department of Archives and History), 2001.
- ISBN 9780813917320– via Google Books.
- ISBN 9780801843990– via Google Books.
- ^ a b Yurimoto, Janine. "To Draw Pleasure and Instruction". scholarworks.wm.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
- ^ Humphries, Lance Lee, Robert Gilmor Jr. (1774–1848): Baltimore Collector and American Art Patron, pp. 86–89, University of Virginia, 1998.
- ^ "Mrs. Robert Gilmor, Jr. (Sarah Reeve Ladson) - Greenough, Horatio". The Gibbes Museum. 2016. Retrieved 2020-07-07.
- ^ Sarah Reeve Ladson Gilmor. National Portrait Gallery
- ^ "Mrs. Robert Gilmor, Jr., 1823, by Thomas Sully".
- ^ "Collections Database". museums.fivecolleges.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-07.
- ISBN 9780786454075– via Google Books.