Mary Warburg


Mary Whelan Warburg was a philanthropist, member of the Warburg banking family, and younger sister to Edwina d'Erlanger, wife of Baron Leo Frédéric Alfred d'Erlanger.

Biography

Born in Colorado City, Texas and raised on her father's sheep ranch near Hope, New Mexico in the last days of the New Mexico Territory and the early days of statehood, Mary Whelan Prue reportedly fired a shotgun at Pancho Villa as he raided the ranch, but missed him. She was 7 years old. She left school in her early teens and with her elder sister, Edwina, settled in New York City, where they worked as fashion models. Mary was later an assistant fashion editor at Vogue. During World War II, Mary Warburg worked with the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs and attended the founding conference of the United Nations in San Francisco in 1945.

Philanthropy

Mary Warburg supported many charitable organizations, including the Henry Street Settlement, the United Negro College Fund, the Institute of International Education; the Association for Homemaker Service and the Hole in the Wall Gang Camps, a network of camps for seriously ill children founded by Paul Newman. She was also long active in Democratic Party circles.

Personal life

She married twice. An early marriage, to Boston artist Richard Currier, an heir to Currier & Ives fortune, ended in divorce in 1936; they had one son, Stephen Currier, the founder of the Council for United Civil Rights Leadership. In 1967, Stephen disappeared with his wife, Audrey Bruce Currier aboard a private plane flying over the Caribbean Sea; their three children survived them. In 1939, she married Edward Mortimer Morris Warburg. Warburg was a founder of the Jewish Museum; the Museum of Modern Art ; and the American Ballet, the precursor of the New York City Ballet. They had two children, Daphne and David. Her second husband died in 1992. Her elder sister, with whom she had decamped to New York so many years earlier, Edwina, died in 1994.
Mary Warburg died on March 8, 2009 at age 100 in Norwalk, Connecticut. She was survived by her two children with Warburg: Daphne Warburg, and David Warburg. Andrea and Lavinia Currier, director of Passion in the Desert are her granddaughters from her first marriage.