Ralph Earl, Mary Ann Wolcott, 1789, Litchfield Historical Society, Litchfield, Connecticut
Born
Mary Ann Wolcott
(1765-02-16)February 16, 1765
Died
March 12, 1805(1805-03-12) (aged 40)
Other names
Given names: Maryann and Marianne Surnames: Woolcott and Woolcott Goodrich
Mary Ann Wolcott Goodrich (1765–1805) was an American socialite in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., moving with her husband Chauncey Goodrich as he served as a Representative and a Senator between 1795 and 1813. Her viewpoints were influential in the affairs of state, business and education.
She was educated at the Litchfield Female Academy.[3] Around 1777, when she was twelve years old, she was inoculated with the smallpox vaccine. At the time, her father wrote to her mother, Lauren Collins Wolcott, and voiced his concerns and hopes regarding how the vaccine might affect her. He wanted her to remain "beloved and esteemed".[2]
Mary Ann Wolcott met Chauncey Goodrich (1759-1815), a lawyer and politician who was married briefly to Abigail Smith, who died in 1788.[4] In 1789, Mary Ann Wolcott married Chauncey Goodrich (1759-1815), becoming Mary Ann Wolcott Goodrich. She lived with her husband in Connecticut, where Chancey was elected to the United States House of Representatives by 1795.[2]
The Litchfield Ledger states, "Her personality is captured through her correspondence with friends and family where she can write very sarcastically, mostly to lighten the mood of letter."[3]
Death
Goodrich died on March 12, 1805[1] at 40 years of age without having had children.[2]
Legacy
Goodrich and her sister Laura Woolcott Mosely, both described as brilliant, were said by Joseph Cooke Jackson to have,
accomplished so much for American society, education, letters, the Church, the army, the bench, the bar, and governments — state and national.[5]
^Garraty, John Arthur; Carnes, Mark C. (Mark Christopher); American Council of Learned Societies (1990). American National Biography. New York : Oxford University Press. pp. 258–259. ISBN978-0-19-520635-7.