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287:, in 1920, and also maintained apartments in Paris, at 4 rue Henri Moissan, and New York City, first at 969 Park Avenue in 1922 and then at 104 East 68th Street. Mildred Bliss was elected a member of The Colonial Dames in the State of New York in 1921. In celebration of the Blisses’ thirtieth wedding anniversary, Mildred Bliss commissioned
165:(1827–1888), and Anna Dorinda Blaksley Barnes (1851–1935). She was the half-sister of Cora (Kora) Fanny Barnes (1858–1911). When Anna Barnes remarried in 1894, Mildred Barnes became the stepdaughter of William Henry Bliss (1844-1932) and the stepsister of Robert Woods Bliss (1875–1962) and Annie Louise Bliss Warren (1878–1964).
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265:) in France in 1914, to which they donated an entire section of 23 ambulances and three staff cars. The Blisses opened and equipped a central depot in Paris, the “Service de Distribution Américaine,” for the distribution of medical and surgical supplies and clothing.
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The bulk of primary correspondence and other related documents are found in the Papers of Robert Woods Bliss and
Mildred Barnes Bliss, ca. 1860–1969, Harvard University Archives, HUGFP76.xx. For secondary sources on the Blisses, see Susan Tamulevich,
272:, beginning in 1914 Mildred Bliss helped establish centers in France for the care of Belgian and French children orphaned or displaced during the war. When America entered the war, Mildred Bliss served as chairman of the executive board of the
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Mildred Barnes Bliss was the principal beneficiary of the estates of her half-sister, Cora Barnes, in 1911, and of her mother, Anna Barnes Bliss, in 1935. This wealth was largely based on Demas Barnes’s investments in
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Sacred Art, Secular
Context, Objects of Art from the Byzantine Collection of Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C., Accompanied by American Paintings from the Collection of Mildred and Robert Woods Bliss
424:, Asen Kirin, ed. with contributions by James N. Carder and Robert S. Nelson (Athens, GA, 2005), 22–37; and James N. Carder, “Mildred and Robert Woods Bliss, A Brief Biography,” in
176:, and, reportedly, at private schools in France. She was fluent in French and was proficient in Spanish, German, and Italian. She acquired a working farm in
246:(1878–1959). Tyler introduced the Blisses to important Parisian art dealers and nurtured their growing interest as art collectors, especially of
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420:(New York, 2001); James N. Carder, “Mildred and Robert Woods Bliss and the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection,” in
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While living in Paris (1912–1919), the
Blisses became reacquainted with Mildred Bliss’s childhood friend, the American
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276:’s Woman’s War Relief Corps in France. For her work during the First World War, she was made a chevalier of the
374:. Paris and New York: Comité Franco-Américain pour la protection des enfants de la frontière. 1918. pp.
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in 1940, the
Blisses resided at 1537 28th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. The Blisses had no children.
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A Home of the
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again (1927–1933) before returning, in retirement, to
Washington, D.C. (1933).
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Mildred Bliss died in
Washington, D.C., at the age of 89 on January 17, 1969.
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Comité Franco-Américain pour la
Protection des Enfants de la Frontière
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428:, James N. Carder, ed. (Washington, D.C., 2010), 1–25.
131:(September 9, 1879 – January 17, 1969) was an American
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American art collector and philanthropist (1879–1969)
242:(1884–1953), who was living in Paris with his wife,
223:, the success of which had made him a wealthy man.
354:. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. pp.
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371:"Children of the Frontier": Third Annual Report
398:. New York: D. Appleton and Company. pp.
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234:, in Washington, D.C.
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300:Museum of Modern Art
230:Bliss' former home,
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221:Fletcher’s Castoria
217:The Centaur Company
178:Sharon, Connecticut
304:Harvard University
274:American Red Cross
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193:Buenos Aires
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69:(1969-01-17)
483:1969 deaths
478:1879 births
254:artworks.
83:Nationality
447:Categories
313:References
44:1879-09-09
248:Byzantine
205:Stockholm
150:Biography
392:(1918).
296:Concerto
189:Brussels
86:American
56:New York
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