ADELIA ANN ARMSTRONG LUTZ (1859–1931) . According to an 1893 publication about leading American women, Adelia Ann Armstrong Lutz “from her childhood breathed an atmosphere of refinement and culture.”... Read full biography
ADELIA ANN ARMSTRONG LUTZ (1859–1931) . According to an 1893 publication about leading American women, Adelia Ann Armstrong Lutz “from her childhood breathed an atmosphere of refinement and culture.” This continued into her later years when she and her husband commissioned an imposing home and... Read full biography
ADELIA ANN ARMSTRONG LUTZ (1859–1931) . According to an 1893 publication about leading American women, Adelia Ann Armstrong Lutz “from her childhood breathed an atmosphere of refinement and culture.” This continued into her later years when she and her husband commissioned an imposing home and studio called Westwood, where they hosted friends and fellow artists; it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Lutz and her twin sister were born at the home of her maternal... Read full biography
ADELIA ANN ARMSTRONG LUTZ (1859–1931) . According to an 1893 publication about leading American women, Adelia Ann Armstrong Lutz “from her childhood breathed an atmosphere of refinement and culture.” This continued into her later years when she and her husband commissioned an imposing home and studio called Westwood, where they hosted friends and fellow artists; it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Lutz and her twin sister were born at the home of her maternal grandparents in Jefferson County, Tennessee. Her paternal grandfather, Drury Armstrong, owned extensive land in Knoxville, Tennessee, and fifty thousand acres that became part of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. At the age of four the artist was... Read full biography
ADELIA ANN ARMSTRONG LUTZ (1859–1931) . According to an 1893 publication about leading American women, Adelia Ann Armstrong Lutz “from her childhood breathed an atmosphere of refinement and culture.” This continued into her later years when she and her husband commissioned an imposing home and studio called Westwood, where they hosted friends and fellow artists; it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Lutz and her twin sister were born at the home of her maternal grandparents in Jefferson County, Tennessee. Her paternal grandfather, Drury Armstrong, owned extensive land in Knoxville, Tennessee, and fifty thousand acres that became part of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. At the age of four the artist was living in Bleak House, an antebellum classical revival house in Knoxville that had been used by Confederate generals as headquarters. Th... Read full biography
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