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Exhibitions : Fashion & Fancy Dress: The Messel Family Dress Collection 1865-2005

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navigation symbol The Messel Family Dress Collection - An Introduction
navigation symbol The Exhibition at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery
navigation symbol The Exhibition at The Millenium Galleries, Sheffield
navigation symbol The Women of the Messel Family
navigation symbol Mary Ann Herapath 1822-1895
navigation symbol Marion Sambourne 1851-1914
navigation symbol Maud Messel 1875-1960
navigation symbol Anne, 6th Countess of Rosse 1902-1992
navigation symbol Susan, Viscountess de Vesci 1927-1986
navigation symbol Alison, 7th Countess of Rosse 1939-
navigation symbol Anna, Lady Oxmantown
navigation symbol Themes
navigation symbol Further Reading
 
 
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  Mary Ann Herapath 1822-1895

First Generation

Mary Ann Herapath c1875. ©Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea: Linley Sambourne House.
Mary Ann Herapath c1875. ©Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea: Linley Sambourne House.

Mary Ann Herapath (née Walker) married the stockbroker Spencer Herapath in 1845. Spencer Herapath had made his money on the railways and the couple could afford to live in London in middle class comfort. Together they had nine children.

Following her death in 1895, Mary Anne's daughter Marion Sambourne preserved two mourning bodices worn by her mother in 1884-1885. These items form the basis of the Messel Collection, being the first items of clothing to be kept in memoriam.

Little is known about Mary Anne's specific fashion style. The only garments worn by her which survive are these elegant and conventional mourning bodices bought from London dressmakers. Family photographs show her wearing similarly smart and conventional dresses.

 
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