Dorothy Marian Kiaora Blanchard was born to Henry James Blanchard, a New Zealand-born master mariner. Her mother was Marion, born in Scotland. There were four other daughters of the marriage. Henry Blanchard became a ship's pilot on Melbourne's Port Phillip Bay, and they resided in the bayside suburb of Williamstown, in a large house called Mandalay. On 1 July 1916, aged 17, she married Lieutenant William Thomas Meikle, an Australian Infantry Force Officer repatriated from Gallipoli, following illness. He subsequently returned to fight in the A.I.F. in France. Meikle remained in the AIF, administering War Graves in France and Belgium until 1921, resigning to join the Imperial War Graves Commission where he was Superintendent until 1926. Dorothy filed for divorce from Meikle in August 1922, alleging desertion. Dorothy left Melbourne for London on 22 August 1922 in search of an acting career. Not being successful there, she went to New York, where she joined the cast of André Charlot's London Revue of 1924, an English musical starring Beatrice Lillie and Gertrude Lawrence. She toured the United States and Canada for a year as Lillie's understudy. In 1925, she married Henry Jacobson, a New York businessman, with whom she had two children, Henry Jacobson and Susan Blanchard, who would later marry actors Henry Fonda, Michael Wager, and Richard Widmark. While still married to Jacobson, albeit unhappily, Dorothy met Oscar Hammerstein II, whose own marriage was also unhappy. They fell in love, and divorced their spouses to marry in 1929. Oscar also had two children from his first marriage: William Hammerstein and Alice Mathias. His marriage to Dorothy lasted until his death in 1960. They had a son together, James Hammerstein.
Professional career
Between the 1930s and the 1950s she operated Dorothy Hammerstein Inc, a high-profile interior design business, with clients on both coasts of the United States. In 1949, along with her husband and the novelists Pearl S. Buck and James A. Michener, she was a founder of , an organization that facilitates the adoption of children of American and Asian parents.
Later life
From its inception in 1969 until her death, Dorothy Hammerstein was actively involved with the Dance Theatre of Harlem, both as a board member and as a member of its national advisory board. She died in her sleep on 3 August 1987. She was survived by her 3 children and 2 step-children, 10 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren.