Harriet Roosevelt Richards | |
---|---|
Born | June 1867 Hartford, Connecticut, United States |
Died | 1932 (aged 64–65) Southwest Harbor, Maine, United States |
Occupation | Illustrator |
Parent | Charles Brinckerhoff Richards |
Relatives | Charles Cutler Torrey (brother-in-law) |
Harriet Roosevelt Richards (June 1867[1] – 1932) was an American illustrator, best known for her work in children's books and magazines.
Harriet Roosevelt Richards was born in Hartford, Connecticut, the daughter of Charles Brinckerhoff Richards and Agnes Edwards Goodwin Richards.[2][3] Both of her parents were born in New York; her father was a mechanical engineer and a professor at Yale University.[4] Her younger sister Marian married historian Charles Cutler Torrey, another Yale professor.[5]
Richards studied art with Frank Weston Benson in Boston and Howard Pyle in Wilmington, and at the Yale School of Fine Arts.[6]
Richards lived in Wilmington, Delaware from 1905 to 1912. She was a member of the Plastic Club in Philadelphia, and exhibited with the New Haven Paint and Clay Club,[7][8] and with the Washington Water Color Club.[9]
Richards's illustrations appeared in children's magazines including Wide Awake, St. Nicholas, The Youth's Companion, and Harper's Young People.[7] She illustrated books for young readers, written by authors including Elizabeth Weston Timlow,[10] Anna Chapin Ray,[11] Helen Hunt Jackson,[12] and Louisa May Alcott.[7]
Richards died at age 65, in Southwest Harbor, Maine, in 1932.[7]