Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur
1837-1880
[Chester A. Arthur]
Biography: Chester Alan Arthur's beloved "Nell" died of pneumonia
on January 12, 1880. That November, when he was elected Vice President, he was still
mourning her bitterly. In his own words: "Honors to me now are not what
they once were." His grief was the more poignant because she was only 42
and her death sudden. Just two days earlier she had attended a benefit
concert in New York City--while he was busy with politics in Albany--and
she caught cold that night while waiting for her carriage. She was
already unconscious when he reached her side.
Her family connections among distinguished Virginians had shaped her
life. She was born at Culpeper Court House, only child of Elizabeth
Hansbrough and William Lewis Herndon, U.S.N. They moved to Washington,
D.C., when he was assigned to help his brother-in-law Lt. Matthew
Fontaine Maury establish the Naval Observatory. While Ellen was still
just a girl her beautiful contralto voice attracted attention; she joined
the choir at St. John's Episcopal Church on Lafayette Square.
Then her father assumed command of a mail steamer operating from New
York; and in 1856 a cousin introduced her to "Chet" Arthur, who was
establishing a law practice in the city. By 1857 they were engaged. In
a birthday letter that year he reminded her of "the soft, moonlight
nights of June, a year ago...happy, happy days at Saratoga--the golden,
fleeting hours at Lake George." He wished he could hear her singing.
That same year her father died a hero's death at sea, going down with his
ship in a gale off Cape Hatteras. The marriage did not take place until
October 1859; and a son named for Commander Herndon died when only two.
But another boy was born in 1864 and a girl, named for her mother, in
1871. Arthur's career brought the family an increasing prosperity; they
decorated their home in the latest fashion and entertained prominent
friends with elegance. At Christmas there were jewels from Tiffany for
Nell, the finest toys for the children.
At the White House, Arthur would not give anyone the place that would
have been his wife's. He asked his sister Mary (Mrs. John E. McElroy) to
assume certain social duties and help care for his daughter. He
presented a stained-glass window to St. John's Church in his wife's
memory; it depicted angels of the Resurrection, and at his special
request it was placed in the south transept so that he could see it at
night from the White House with the lights of the church shining through.
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