Annie Burr Jennings

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Born1855 (1855)
San Francisco, California
DiedJuly 27, 1939(1939-07-27) (aged 83)
Annie Burr Jennings
Born1855 (1855)
San Francisco, California
DiedJuly 27, 1939(1939-07-27) (aged 83)

Annie Burr Jennings (1855  1939) was an American philanthropist, socialite, and landscape designer. For much of her life, she was a prominent resident of Fairfield, Connecticut where she funded many local infrastructure improvements and preservation efforts. Jennings was a distant relative of Aaron Burr.[1]

Annie Burr Jennings was born September 20, 1855. The Jennings family were original colonists to the Connecticut area around 1645. Her father, Oliver Burr Jennings, had moved the family to San Francisco to profit off the gold rush of the 1850s. He invested in John Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company in the 1860s-1870s and received a wealthy payout that would last generations. In the 1860s, the Jennings moved back to Fairfield, Connecticut and split their time between homes in New York City and Fairfield. Annie had two brothers and two sisters, one of which was the financier and politician Oliver Gould Jennings. Although she did not receive a college education, she likely received private tutoring while growing up and became a lifelong supporter and donor of Yale University.[2][1]

Annie spent her family's wealth on philanthropic projects in and around Fairfield, Connecticut. In 1909, she built a private mansion at 375 Old Post Road in Fairfield that she named “Sunnie-Holme.” She never married and specified that Sunnie-Holme was to be destroyed after her death. She was a close friend of conservationist Mabel Osgood Wright. She was a distant relative of Aaron Burr and collected artifacts related to his life.[1][3][4]

Philanthropy

Using her family money, Annie Burr Jennings was a collector and philanthropist for most of her life. By the end of her life, the residents of Fairfield, Connecticut referred to her colloquially as the “First Lady of Fairfield.” Jennings was a member of the Connecticut Audubon Society and, alongside her friend Mabel Osgood Wright, funded the Birdcraft Museum and Sanctuary in 1914.[2] With her brother, Oliver Gould Jennings, Annie was instrumental in the creation of the new Fairfield Memorial Library building in 1903, where there is a room named after her, and the Fairfield Historical Society.[5] She donated land to the town for the establishment of the first high school, an American Legion building, and Jennings Beach. In 1914, she opened the grounds of her private mansion, Sunnie-Holme, to the public. She was a lifelong supporter of Yale University and would travel by private rail car to Yale to attend sporting events.[1][6] Jennings also served on the board of the Woodbury Glebe House Restoration Committee, the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association, the National Council for Historic Sites and Buildings, the Landmarks Society of Connecticut, and the Hroswitha Club, among other affiliations.[7]

Landscape Design

Politics

References

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