Eleanor Norcross


Eleanor Norcross, born Ella Augusta Norcross , was an American painter who studied under William Merritt Chase and Alfred Stevens. She lived the majority of her adult life in Paris, France as an artist and collector and spent the summers in her hometown of Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Norcross painted Impressionist portraits and still lifes, and is better known for her paintings of genteel interiors.

Ella Augusta Norcross was born in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, about 50 miles west of Boston, to Amasa Norcross and Susan Augusta Norcross. Her father was an attorney, Fitchburgs first mayor, state senator, and United States representative. Her mother, Susan, had been a school teacher in the Fitchburg area and during the Civil War was a leader of the Ladies Soldiers Aid Society, which provided clothing, blankets, and other supplies to soldiers from Fitchburg and other locations in the state of Massachusetts. In 1863, her threeyearold brother Nelson died of scarlet fever, and when she was 14, her mother died of consumption. Norcross and her father, the remaining household members, had a close relationship.

Source: Wikipedia


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