
Biography: Henry Francis du Pont, 1880-1969
Henry Francis du Pont, the only son of Henry Algernon and Pauline du
Pont, was born at Winterthur in 1880, and in his own words, "always loved
everything connected with it." A scion of Delaware's industrialist Du
Pont family, he entered New England's Groton School in 1893, and then
attended Harvard from 1899 to 1903. In 1901 he began taking courses at
Bussey Institution, Harvard's college of practical agriculture and horticulture,
and took his first trip abroad.
In 1906 Du Pont's father was elected to the United States Senate. Soon
afterwards, he ceded responsibility of supervising the garden at Winterthur
to his son. One of the first areas that Henry Francis created was the
March Bank. He also developed and improved the formal garden areas east
of the house. During these years before World War I, Du Pont traveled
extensively to study the great gardens of Europe, especially those in
England.
Henry Francis du Pont married Ruth Wales in 1916. Shortly afterwards,
he became interested in American antiques and began amassing his renowned
collection of early American decorative arts. He continued to develop
Winterthur's farmland, raised a prizewinning herd of Holstein-Friesian
cows, and worked with landscape architect Marian Cruger Coffin to blend
the garden into the rural landscape. By 1925 Winterthur consisted of turkey,
chicken, sheep, pig, and dairy farms, vegetable and flower gardens, greenhouses,
a sawmill, a railroad station, and a post office.
Between 1928 and 1932 Du Pont doubled the size of the existing house
at Winterthur and converted his home to a showplace for his collections.
Throughout the next two decades Du Pont and his family lived in a museum-in-progress.
His two daughters grew up with the sounds and sights of construction,
surrounded by beautiful, breakable objects. In 1951, Du Pont turned his
home over to the Winterthur Corporation, a non-profit educational institution,
and moved into a smaller home on the estate as the Henry Francis du Pont
Winterthur Museum opened to the public.
In 1960, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy visited Winterthur and invited
Du Pont to head the Fine Arts Committee that oversaw the restoration of
the White House. Until his death in 1969, Du Pont divided his time between
his homes at Winterthur; Southampton, Long Island; Boca Grande, Florida;
and an apartment in New York City.
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