Margaret Scully Zimmele (September 1, 1872 – January 23, 1964) was an American artist.
Margaret Scully Zimmele was born on September 1, 1872 in Pittsburgh.[1] She was the daughter of John Sullivan Scully, a wealthy Pittsburgh financier, and Mary Elizabeth Negley. Her brother was Pittsburgh mayor Cornelius D. Scully.[2][3]
She and her parents moved to Washington, D.C., in 1902. In 1905, she married chemist Harry Bernard Zimmele. He died the next year from injuries he sustained when an automobile struck their carriage in Schenley Park. Margaret Zimmele was pregnant at the time and she named her daughter Harryette in his honor. Harryette died very young, in 1929.[6]
Zimmele was an active artist and clubwoman in Washington, D.C., thorough her life. She was a founding member of the Arts Club of Washington and active in the Daughters of the American Revolution. One cause she was particularly devoted to was anti-communism and created a series of propaganda postcards. She continued to paint until 1961, when she was the victim of a vicious attack with a hammer.[6][8]
^Jordan, John W. (John Woolf); Montgomery, Thomas Lynch; Spofford, Ernest; Godcharies, Frederic Antes (1914). Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania biography. Vol. 5. University of Pittsburgh Library System. New York : Lewis Historical Publishing Co. pp. 1711–13.