Frances Esther Wolcott (néeMetcalfe, formerlyBass) (May 19, 1851 – February 9, 1933) was an American socialite and author.
Early life
Fanny, as she was known, was born on May 19, 1851, at her father's house on Swan Street in Buffalo, New York. She was a daughter of James Harvey Metcalfe (1822–1879) and Erzelia Frances (née Stetson) Metcalfe (1832–1913). Among her siblings were James Stetson Metcalfe (a drama critic for Life Magazine and The Wall Street Journal who married Elizabeth Tyree), George Stetson Metcalfe, and Francis Tyler Metcalfe. Her father came to Buffalo from Bath, New York, in 1855 and created a family fortune establishing the First National Bank and the Buffalo, New York and Philadelphia Railroad. He was also an early park commissioner and helped implement Frederick Law Olmsted's plan for the city's park system.
Her paternal great-grandfather was killed in the Tory army at the Battle of Bunker Hill and her grandfather, Thomas Metcalfe, was "taken by his mother to Virginia, where later he freed his Virginia-born slaves and trekked to Central New York".[1]
She lived all over the world and in 1932, shortly before death, had published by Minton, Balch and Company, Heritage of Years: Kaleidoscopic Memories,[1] a "brilliant work of a sophisticate who looks back over 80 years and tells what she saw during that time."[3] In the prologue to her memoir, she writes:
"The privileges of my life have been great, including the acquaintance of distinguished persons of three continents, audiences with Popes and Kings, intercourse with soldiers, artists, musicians and writes. Those who have attracted me most are those who have had great dreams and striven to make them reality."[1]
After the divorce, she bought Hillcrest, a 32-room mansion in Pavilion, New York, in the Genesee Valley.[4][13] Fanny died in New York on February 9, 1933.[13] After a funeral service at her son's residence in Buffalo, she was buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery there.[14]