Marriage and family as not suitable to be seen by children. Elizabeth Watrous quipped, "You see, the woman didn't have time to dress for the street. The
Uhlans were coming and she had time to dress only for the opera." In 1887 Watrous married
Elizabeth Snowden Nichols (1858–1921). Her father, William Snowden Nichols, was a member of the
New York Stock Exchange, and she grew up in the posh neighborhood of
Grymes Hill, Staten Island. She too was an artist, having studied in Paris under
Jean-Jacques Henner and
Carolus-Duran at "the studio of the ladies." (Women were not allowed entry to the
École des Beaux-Arts.) Henner gave the couple one of his paintings as a wedding gift. In 1914 the Elizabeth Watrous Medal for Sculpture was established, awarded by the National Academy of Design. The medal itself was designed by
Robert Ingersoll Aitken. Although Elizabeth's first name was misspelled on the medal, the error was never corrected. Elizabeth opposed
women's suffrage. In 1910, as a member of the
National League for the Civic Education of Women, she headed a special committee charged with "instructing artists in the subject of anti-suffrage." In 1882, at age 22, her younger brother William Gilman Nichols became a partner in the high-end furniture and decorating company
Herter Brothers; business analysts
R.G. Dun & Co. described him as "a young man of decided artistic tastes, of good character and habits & well fitted for his present occupation." Nichols was president of Herter Brothers from 1891 until its dissolution in 1906. His marriage in 1893 to
Herman O. Armour's daughter Mary was given the front-page headline "Marriage of Millionaires" in one newspaper. From 1900 the couple resided at a sprawling waterfront estate called Petronia in Rye, New York. Harry Watrous painted a portrait of Nichols, to whom he also made a gift of his painting
The Line of Love. After Nichols's death at 49 in 1909, his widow and children continued to reside at Petronia. Elizabeth's niece (daughter of her younger brother Erickson Norman Nichols) was the aviation pioneer
Ruth Rowland Nichols. Harry Watrous's younger brother Walter was a frequent figure in sporting and society pages. ("There is no more popular clubman in New York," said one newspaper.) After a scandalous divorce (his wife left him for their next-door neighbor, her best friend's husband), Walter withdrew from society. His sudden death in 1903 led to more unwanted attention from the press when it came out that he had a new wife and a residence in Atlantic City completely unknown to his friends and family. Both Harry and his mother felt obliged to comment on the situation to reporters from
The New York Times and the
New York Tribune. A large photo of the presumed widow dominated the front page of the
Evening World. (A court would later rule that Katherine Ballou was a
common-law wife and that the estate of Walter Watrous was not responsible for her $5825 debt to a dressmaker.) In 1914 Watrous inherited a substantial estate. "By the will of his mother, Mrs. Ruth A. Watrous, who died Oct. 19, and disposed of about $260,000, which was filed for probate, Oct. 29, Harry W. Watrous gets all jewelry, paintings, books, horses, carriages, and household effects, and the residuary estate amounting to $175,000." Harry and Elizabeth Watrous had no children.
Summers on Lake George; a hoax; a killing in self-defense File:Watrous house Hague NY.jpg|thumb|"The House that Harry and Elizabeth Watrous Built" on Lake George in 1907, until recently the Ruah Bed and Breakfast.From 1891, Harry and Elizabeth spent their summers at
Lake George in Hague,
New York. An avid fisherman, Harry "won the distinction of catching the largest salmon trout" (at 24 pounds) ever taken from the lake. He was also an avid boater, owning two steam yachts christened
Ruth and
Camper, and winning trophies in the annual sailboat regatta. In 1904, Harry, "known for his antics," Watrous claimed the sight of the monster caused a bridegroom to desert his bride in a canoe while he frantically swam to shore and vanished in the woods. The large waterfront house the Watrouses built on Lake George in 1907 is still standing. (This house "replaced a rustic building which the couple had erected on the property, one of several they built in Hague.") It was in the dining room of this house, at about 2 a.m. on Monday, 16 June 1913, that Harry Watrous, in night clothes and with a flashlight in one hand and a revolver in the other, "shot and killed, in self-defense…one of two burglars who had entered his summer villa." There were conflicting details of the incident in newspaper accounts. Frank Cardinal, age 35, was shot twice in the abodomen and died in hospital. His brother Joseph fled the scene but was later arrested. (Or as one newspaper put it, the man "got away before Watrous had a chance to shoot him.")
Sherwood studio; friendship with Blakelock From 1886, Watrous kept a studio at the
Sherwood Studio Building at 58 West 57th Street (at the corner of 6th Avenue) in New York. A visiting reporter from
The New York Times declared him "the soul of geniality, despite the sign, 'Positively Will Not See Any One,' which may be found on his studio door." Along with the serious work of painting, Watrous hosted poker games and late-night drinking parties. At an Easter "bachelor's breakfast" in his studio, cocktails were "served in a unique manner: the inside of a number of eggs will be blown out through tiny holes, and then the cocktail will be put in, sealed up, and the eggs will be broken by the guests." It was at the Sherwood building that Watrous befriended the eccentric painter
Ralph Blakelock, whose studio adjoined Watrous's until Blakelock's impoverishment forced him to give it up, after which Watrous often allowed Blakelock free access to his own studio. Blakelock found a loyal advocate in the young Harry Watrous, with whom he appears to have had almost nothing in common. A decade older than Watrous, Blakelock was self-taught, whereas Watrous studied art in Paris; Blakelock was poor, Watrous affluent; Blakelock had few friends, Watrous joined New York's leading clubs; Blakelock mostly painted wilderness, Watrous painted beautiful young women in elegant interiors. [It might also be noted that Blakelock had nine children, and Watrous none.] Nevertheless…Watrous became Blakelock's great ally, buying many of Blakelock's works himself and helping to sell others. Throughout Blakelock's life, and after his death, Watrous would work steadily to promote Blakelock's art and safeguard his legacy. This friendship was sometimes sorely tested. One summer while Watrous was away, "Blakelock was given permission to use his studio, in which were stored some rare old priestly vestments, that in former time had been worn by bishops and cardinals. When he returned he was horrified to find that Blakelock had been turning the old red and flowered cloths to a practical use, his family of some eight or ten children being dressed in them, while the entire group enjoyed the comforts of the large studio." Watrous was Blakelock's "most faithful supporter, both during the productive decades of the 1880s and 1890s and during the period of his confinement" for mental illness. "Over the years, when Blakelock was in financial need, Watrous handled his work for him, selling it to art dealers and collectors, something Blakelock often could not manage for himself." A profile of Watrous from 1923 noted that "he made it his practice to help Blakelock to the extent of his ability by buying his pictures, until at one time he had so many Blakelocks that he gave them away as wedding presents. Now he realizes, and he smiles as he contemplates the lost opportunity, that he might have had a small fortune had he kept those pictures and sold them after the boom in Blakelocks arrived." Some anecdotes about Watrous and Blakelock are related in
American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. III.
Final years Watrous was widowed in 1921. At the time of his death in 1940 he was living with his closest surviving relative, an unmarried cousin, Anne Watrous, at 17 East 89th Street in
Manhattan. "A good painter with a lovable personality has been lost in Harry Watrous," said his obituary in the
New York Herald Tribune. "He was universally likeable. He had a bubbling sense of humor, besides kindness and never-failing good will.…Harry Watrous had charm and it was the more potent because he gave no thought to its cultivation but was simply and spontaneously his engaging self. His long career has left its mark, the mark of a devoted artist and a high-minded gentleman." ==In museums and at auction==