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Phoebe
Apperson Hearst (1842-1919)
Phoebe Apperson Hearst
was born 1842 in Franklin County, Missouri. Before
marrying 41 year old George
Hearst at the age of 19, Miss Apperson
worked as a teacher in area schools.
Soon after their marriage the couple moved to San
Francisco where Phoebe gave birth to their only child,
William
Randolph in 1863. In 1873 Phoebe took young
William on a grand tour of Europe where the two spent
more than a year visiting castles, museums and various
cultural centers. This trip would prove to be a pivotal
inspiration for William's later endeavor constructing
Hearst
Castle.
When George Hearst was elected to the United States
senate in 1887, the couple relocated to Washington
D.C. where Phoebe entertained many guests and statesman.
Four years later, Phoebe became the sole heir to her
husband's valuable estate upon his death in 1891.
After George's death, Phoebe again returned to California
and renewed construction on a palatial residence in
Pleasanton, California that had been started by her
son a few years earlier. For the project, Mrs. Hearst
commissioned Julia
Morgan as architect. She would later become
the architect behind Hearst Castle.
Throughout her life Phoebe was dedicated to education
and, when her financial status allowed her to, she
became a generous philanthropist of various educational
endeavors. As early as 1891, she made a large gift
to the University of California, Berkeley in order
to endow several scholarships for women students.
She also funded an international architectural competition
for a master plan for the University of California,
Berkeley, endowed a scholarship program for students
at the University and presented the campus with the
gift of the Hearst Memorial Mining Building and Hearst
Hall.
Later she financed a school for the training of kindergarten
teachers and in 1887 she founded the first free kindergarten
in the United States. She eventually opened up six
more of these free schools supported by her time and
money. In 1897, she founded the National Congress
of Mothers, a forerunner of the National Council of
Parents and Teachers, better known today as the PTA.
In 1897 she became the first woman Regent of the University
of California, serving actively on the board from
1897 to 1919.
Phoebe Apperson Hearst died in 1919, a victim of the
worldwide influenza epidemic of 1918-1919.
"Hearst Castle", "Hearst San Simeon State Historical Monument", "La Cuesta Encantada",
and "The Enchanted Hill" are registered trademarks of Hearst Castle®/California State Parks.
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