Clara Driscoll
Clara Driscoll
1861 - 1944
Upon her marriage in 1889, Driscoll had to leave Tiffany Studios because married or engaged women were not allowed to work for the company. After her first husband, Francis Driscoll, passed away in 1892, she began working with Tiffany again, but subsequently quit after getting engaged to Edwin Waldo in 1896. Waldo disappeared and the marriage never occurred, so once again Driscoll went back to work at Tiffany until her engagement to Edward A. Booth in 1909. She was married to Booth for thirty-five years. Driscoll and Booth traveled back and forth between New York and a house in Point Pleasant, New Jersey, until 1930 when Booth retired. The couple then retired to Florida, and kept the Point Pleasant house as a summer home, and spent their later years between New Jersey and Florida until Clara died on November 6th, 1944. Today, Driscoll’s name still makes the headlines. As new information came to light, it turned out the “Tiffany Girls” and Clara Driscoll were the ones who had created many of the Tiffany lamps originally attributed to Louis Comfort Tiffany and his staff of male designers.
[Retrieved on 4/30/2021 from https://case.edu/ech/articles/d/driscoll-clara]
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