'Constance Cary Harrison' (
April 25,
1843-
November 21,
1920), was an American writer. She was also known as ''Constance Cary'', ''Constance C. Harrison'', and ''Mrs. Burton Harrison''.
Constance Cary was born into an
aristocratic family in
Vaucluse, Virginia. She lived in
Richmond, Virginia during the
American Civil War and moved in the same set as
Varina Davis,
Mary Boykin Chesnut, and
Virginia Clay-Clopton. She met and was courted by Confederate President
Jefferson Davis’s private secretary,
Burton Harrison (1838- 1904); they were married in 1867.
The year before, Burton Harrison had settled in
New York City and she joined him there. He held various public offices and she wrote and was active in the city’s social scene. Among her other contributions to
Americana, Constance Cary Harrison persuaded her friend
Emma Lazarus to donate a poem to the fundraising effort to pay for a pedestal for the
Statue of Liberty.
Constance Cary Harrison died in
Washington, DC.
Works
The works of Constance Cary Harrison include:
★ Anglomaniacs, The - 1899
★ Bachelor Maid, A - 1894
★ Belhaven Tales; Crow’s Nest; Una; and King David - 1892
★ Bric-a-Brac Stories - 1885
★ Carlyles: A Study of the Fall of the Confederacy, The - 1905
★ Circle of a Century, The
★ Count and the Congressman, The - 1908
★ Daughter of the South and Shorter Stories, A - 1892
★ Edelweis of the Sierras; Golden-Rod, and Other Tales - 1892
★ Errant Wooing, An - 1895
★ Flower de Hundred - 1890
★ Golden-Rod - 1880
★ Good Americans
★ Latter-Day Sweethearts - 1906
★ Little Centennial Lady, A - 1876
★ Merry Maid of Arcady, The
★ Old-Fashioned Fairy Book - 1884
★ Princess of the Hills, A - 1901
★ Recollections Grave and Gay - 1911
★ Russian Honeymoon, A - 1883
★ Story of Helen of Troy, The - 1881
★ Sweet Bells out of Tune - 1893
★ Sylvia’s Husband - 1904
★ Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch, The
★ A Virginia Cousin and Bar Harbor Tales - 1895
★ Well-Bred Girl in Society, The
★ Woman's Handiwork in Modern Homes - 1881
Trivia
★ In September, 1861, Constance Cary and her cousins, Hettie Cary and Jennie Cary, sewed the first examples of the
Confederate Battle Flag following a design created by
William Porcher Miles and modified by General
Joseph E. Johnston.
★ Noted actress
Minnie Maddern Fiske appeared in the 1901 production of Harrison’s play
The Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch.
★ Constance Cary and Burton Harrison were the parents of
Francis Burton Harrison (1873-1957), who served as a
Governor-General of the Philippines.
★ In the 1880s. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison commissioned
Arthur Rotch of the architectural firm,
Rotch & Tilden, to build a seaside "cottage" called "Sea Urchins" at Bar Harbor, Maine. This property is now owned by the College of the Atlantic. Sea Urchins was the center of hospitality during the "Gilded Age" in Bar Harbor and she entertained many noted visitors there, including friend and neighbor,
James G. Blaine.
Sources and External Links
★
The Burton Norvell Harrison Family Papers at the Library of Congress
★
Virtual American Biography
★
A 1901 biography
★ (credited as writer for the 1914 movie version of ‘’The Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch’’)