Gertrude Webster
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Gertrude Divine Webster (born Gertrude Adelaide Divine; June 4, 1872) was an American philanthropist known for co-founding the
Desert Botanical Garden Desert Botanical Garden is a botanical garden located in Papago Park, at 1201 N. Galvin Parkway in Phoenix, central Arizona. Founded by the Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society in 1937 and established at this site in 1939, the garden now has ...
in Phoenix, Arizona, and establishing Yester House, her summer estate which is on the
National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic v ...
and houses the
Southern Vermont Arts Center The Southern Vermont Arts Center is a multi-disciplinary arts organization in Manchester, Vermont. It is located on the west side of West Road, at the former Yester House country estate. The center includes art galleries with permanent and rota ...
. During her marriage to William McClellan Ritter (1898 to 1922) she was known as Gertrude Divine Ritter. She subsequently married Hugh Webster (1924 until 1928), and was known as Gertrude Divine Webster until her death on March 31, 1947.


Early life and education

Webster was born in 1872 in Sycamore, Illinois. Her parents were Richard L. Divine and Susan S. Smith Divine. She attended
Ann Arbor High School Pioneer High School is a public school in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Founded in 1856, the school was previously called the Union School and Ann Arbor High School. In 2010, Pioneer was listed as a "Silver Medal School" by the '' U.S. News & World R ...
. She earned a Bachelor of Letters from the
University of Michigan , mottoeng = "Arts, Knowledge, Truth" , former_names = Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania (1817–1821) , budget = $10.3 billion (2021) , endowment = $17 billion (2021)As o ...
in 1896. After college, she lived in Columbus, Ohio, where she founded the Big Sister movement in Columbus. On February 2, 1898, she married a lumber tycoon from West Virginia, William McClellan Ritter, at St. Thomas' Church in New York. While in Columbus, Webster was the president of the Columbus Arts Association from 1911 to 1921. In 1909, Webster commissioned the painter
Cecilia Beaux Eliza Cecilia Beaux (May 1, 1855 – September 17, 1942) was an American society portraitist, whose subjects included First Lady Edith Roosevelt, Admiral Sir David Beatty and Georges Clemenceau. Trained in Philadelphia, she went on to study in ...
to paint her mother while Beaux was in Columbus, Ohio. The resulting painting "Mrs. Richard Low Devine, born Susan Sofia Smith", was displayed in the
Columbus Museum of Art The Columbus Museum of Art (CMA) is an art museum in downtown Columbus, Ohio. Formed in 1878 as the Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts (its name until 1978), it was the first art museum to register its charter with the state of Ohio. The museum collect ...
multiple times. Webster's summer home,
Yester House Yester House is an early 18th-century mansion near Gifford in East Lothian, Scotland. It was the home of the Hay family, later Marquesses of Tweeddale, from the 15th century until the late 1960s. Construction of the present house began in 1699 ...
, was in Manchester, Vermont. The house was built for Webster, her then-husband William Ritter, and their two adopted children in 1917. The house was designed by Henry Murphy and Richard Henry Dana, with the landscape design done by Charles N. Lowrie. While she lived there, the house held 6,000 pieces of Swiss glass, and Webster wrote about the Vermont Glass Factory in a 1923 article in ''Country Life''. She also worked with the League of Women Voters in Vermont. From 1919 until 1921, Webster was one of the highest tax payers in Manchester, and at the time Yester House was showcased in ''Country Life'' magazine. In 1950, Yester House was purchased by the
Southern Vermont Arts Center The Southern Vermont Arts Center is a multi-disciplinary arts organization in Manchester, Vermont. It is located on the west side of West Road, at the former Yester House country estate. The center includes art galleries with permanent and rota ...
. In 1988, a successful application was filed for Yester house to join the National Register of Historic Places. Webster divorced Ritter in 1922, and they agreed she was to receive $70,000 per year, the Vermont house, and a house in Washington, DC. When Ritter stopped paying alimony in 1932, she sued him. The resulting 1934 trial was covered by the ''New York Times'' during which Webster noted that Ritter "beat the horses and the dogs" and further objected when she brought ailing children from a Washington, DC, hospital to their summer home in Vermont. Webster initially declined a settlement offer of $30,000 per year, but accepted the offer the following day. Webster was also a collector of early
Americana Americana may refer to: *Americana (music), a genre or style of American music *Americana (culture), artifacts of the culture of the United States Film, radio and television * ''Americana'' (1992 TV series), a documentary series presented by J ...
who donated multiple pieces to the
Smithsonian Museum of American History The National Museum of American History: Kenneth E. Behring Center collects, preserves, and displays the heritage of the United States in the areas of social, political, cultural, scientific, and military history. Among the items on display is t ...
. In 1924 she donated a room to the Smithsonian Institution. The donation was the paneled walls of the parlor of the Reuben Bliss house from Springfield, Massachusetts, which was presented in a 1957 report. Webster married Hugh Webster in Manchester, Vermont, on November 22, 1924, and they split their time between Vermont and Phoenix. She divorced him in 1928, but retained the last name Webster. A few years later, after a trip to Switzerland, Webster returned to Phoenix with an unusual cactus and met Gustaf Starck, an engineer who organized the Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society in 1934. In 1936, Webster, now president of the Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society, asked the state of Arizona for land and $2500 to run the garden. When the state declined, Webster raised the $40,000 needed to establish the garden, including a $10,000 donation of her own. In 1938 they got permission from the state of Arizona to use the land, in what had been the Papago Saguaro National Monument, as a botanical garden. The landscape architect Charles Gibbs Adams helped design the plans for the botanical garden, and Webster helped design the layout while she was living at her house in Vermont. The
Desert Botanical Garden Desert Botanical Garden is a botanical garden located in Papago Park, at 1201 N. Galvin Parkway in Phoenix, central Arizona. Founded by the Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society in 1937 and established at this site in 1939, the garden now has ...
opened to the public in 1939, and included plants donated by Starck, Webster, and others. The Webster Auditorium, named after Gertrude Webster, is on the property of the Desert Botanical Garden and was dedicated on January 21, 1940, with over 1500 people attending the ceremony. During World War II, the garden was tended by a few volunteers, but was not faring well. Webster died on March 31, 1947 in Phoenix and was buried in the Elmwood Cemetery in DeKalb County, Illinois. She directed the income from her Arizona properties to the Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society to be used in the administration of the Desert Botanical Garden. The one stipulation was that the society had to retain at least two hundred members in good standing, which Lou Ella Archer made happen in the period following Webster's death. Upon her death, items from her estate were auctioned off in New York City, ultimately resulting in a donation for over $114,000 that was given to the Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.


Honors

George Edmund Lindsay George Edmund Lindsay (1916 – 2002) was an American botanist, naturalist, and museum director. From 1956 to 1963, he was director of the San Diego Natural History Museum and served as Director of the California Academy of Sciences from 1963 ...
, who served as the executive director of the Desert Botanical Garden, named a succulent after Webster. The plant, '' Echinocereus websterianus'' is described in the ''Cactus and Succulent Journal of America'' in a 1947 publication.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Webster, Gertrude University of Michigan alumni Philanthropists from Illinois 1872 births 1947 deaths People from Sycamore, Illinois