Annie Renouf-Whelpley
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October 18, 1849
Annie Renouf-Whelpley | |
|---|---|
Annie Renouf-Whelpley in 1885. | |
| Born | Annie Vincent Whelpley October 18, 1849 New York City, U.S. |
| Died | May 16, 1930 (aged 80) Florence, Italy |
| Known for | Painting |
| Movement | Romanticism |
| Spouse | |
Annie Renouf-Whelpley (1849–1930) was an expatriate American artist, singer and composer.
Annie Vincent Whelpley was born in New York City in 1849,[1] the daughter and only child of Dr. James Davenport Whelpley (1817–1872) and his wife Anna Marie Wells (1828–1860). James Whelpley was a graduate of Yale College (1837), a physician, philosopher, metallurgist, Central American adventurer, and for a time editor and part-owner of the American Whig Review. His wife, Anna Wells, was the daughter of the Boston poets Thomas Wells (1790–1861) and Anna Maria Foster Wells (1795–1868), and a great-granddaughter of Massachusetts governor Samuel Adams.
When Annie Whelpley was ten years old, she appeared in the 1860 census, living in New York with her parents. Her mother died there on July 9, 1860, and the following year, at Dedham, Massachusetts, on September 19, 1861, her father married Mary Louise Breed (1841–1932). They had three children: James Davenport Whelpley, Jr. (1863–1948); Mary Taylor Whelpley Brush (1866–1949), an artist and aviator; and Philip Breed Whelpley (1870–1958), all born in Boston.
Annie Whelpley married at Boston on February 8, 1871, and her father died there on April 15, 1872.


