Marie (Whelen) Clews (1880-1959)

Mrs "Marie" Elsie (Whelen) Goelet, Clews

She was born in Philadelphia and was described as, "an active six-foot tall woman with a bold and confident sense of style - a fashion leader who patronized such well-known designers as Charles Frederick Worth, Jeanne Lanvin, and Paul Poiret". She often favored wearing kimonos and when Poirot designed her wedding dress on the occasion of her marriage to Henry Clews, it was distinctly oriental. Having broken off their engagement three times she was almost forcibly married in 1904 to Bobby Goelet. Their divorce was finalized in March 1914 and - having kept their affair a secret since about 1912 - she was married in private at her home (8 Washington Square North) to Henry Clews Jr. Combining their artistic passions, they created the Chateau de la Napoule near Cannes in the South of France.

Parents (2)

Henry Whelen

Henry Whelen Jr., of Philadelphia & "Clovelydale" Devon, Pennsylvania

1848-1907

Laura Baker

Mrs Laura (Baker) Whelen, Kuhn

1856-1940

Spouses (2)

Robert Wilson Goulet

"Bobby" Goulet, of New York, Newport & Paris

1880-1966

Henry Clews Jr.

Artist & Sculptor, of Château de la Napoule on the Côte d'Azur, France

1876-1937

Children (3)

Ogden Goelet II

of the South of France & Italy

1907-1969

Peter Goelet

of New York & Newport, R.I.

1911-1986

Mancha Madison Clews

of Clews & Strawbridge, Marine & Auto Dealers, Malvern, Pennsylvania

1915-2006

Associated Houses (1)

Ochre Court

Newport, Rhode Island

Image Courtesy of Mandelieu.fr; The Kimono Inspiration: Art and Art-to-wear in America, by the Textile Museum (Washington D.C): Mysteries in the Costume Department, MCNY; Elsie Goulet is Granted Divorce, San Jose Mercury, October, 1914; Birth of Son, New York Times, 1915; High Art or Husband