On March 5, 1923, she married
Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney (1899–1992) in Paris, the first of his eventual four wives. Whitney was the son of
Harry Payne Whitney and
Gertrude Vanderbilt. Before their
Reno divorce, on grounds of incompatibility, in 1929, they had two children: • Harry Payne Whitney II (1924–1985), who married Alexandra Ewing (1927–2014), the daughter of Gifford Cochran Ewing and Frances Riker. and later Andrea R. Whitney • Nancy Marie Whitney (1926–2006), who married four times and divorced three times: • in 1949 to
Edwin Denison Morgan III (1921–2001), by whom she had two children: • on July 1, 1958, to his older widowed brother, Edward Augustus Hurd Jr. • and finally, to well known water colorist Pierre Lutz (1923–1991). In 1930, Marie remarried, to
W. Averell Harriman (1891–1986), a businessman and son of railroad baron
Edward H. Harriman and
Mary Williamson Averell. He was the brother of
E. Roland Harriman and
Mary Harriman Rumsey. Harriman's father was a close friend of
Hall Roosevelt, the brother of
Eleanor Roosevelt. Harriman had previously been married to Kitty Lanier Lawrence until 1929, with whom he had two daughters: (1) Mary Averell Harriman (1917–1996), who married Dr. Shirley C. Fisk and (2) Kathleen Lanier Harriman (1917–2011), who married Stanley Grafton Mortimer Jr. (1913–1999), who had previously been married to socialite
Babe Paley (1915–1978). On their honeymoon in Europe, the Harrimans purchased oil paintings by Van Gogh, Degas, Cézanne, Picasso, and Renoir. They later donated many of the works she bought and collected, including those of the artist
Walt Kuhn, to the
National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. In 1971, after her death in 1970, Harriman married
Pamela Beryl Digby Churchill Hayward, the former wife of
Winston Churchill's son
Randolph, and widow of
Broadway producer
Leland Hayward.
Philanthropy and death In the years before her death, she concentrated her charitable work on the
New York Association for the Blind and the
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation. Harriman died of a heart attack on September 26, 1970, at
George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C. ==References==