Sarah Fraser was the youngest of five children, one boy and four girls, of George Corning Fraser (born February 25, 1872, in
New York City, died November 15, 1935, in
Dallas,
Texas) and Jane Gardener Tutt (born August 4, 1874, in
Danville, Kentucky, died December 25, 1936, in
New York City). They were married December 5, 1895, in
St. Louis,
Missouri. Sarah was born in
Morristown, New Jersey, on December 27, 1911. Almost a fifty-year resident of Gloucester, she died in
Boston on February 9, 2002, at the age of 90. Sarah's father was a
lawyer in New York City and amateur
geologist by avocation. He had a great spirit of wanderlust that he passed on to his children. He enjoyed taking his daughters on summer field trips to the western United States, especially
Utah. Sarah was educated at
Brearley School in New York City, became a debutante, and was honored at a dinner and dance given by her older sisters in November, 1930. She followed her older sister, Ann, to
Bryn Mawr College. She graduated in 1934 with a degree in geology, with distinction. During her senior year she received the Elizabeth S. Shippen Prize in Science. In 1934 and 1935 she returned to Brearley to teach science. In 1984, at her fiftieth reunion, she was chosen by her Bryn Mawr classmates to present the class gift to the college. On May 2, 1936, in the garden of the estate at Morristown, she married Chandler Robbins II of Boston, the son of physician Dr. William Bradford Robbins and his wife Marian Bennett Robbins. Chandler Robbins II was born in Boston on November 21, 1906, and died in Boston on June 2, 1955, of cancer. His entire career, except for the
World War II years, was spent with the
Bates Manufacturing Company of
Lewiston, Maine, one of the greatest
textile companies in America. The young couple moved to
Auburn, Maine, where the first three of five children were born: Hanson Corning, born in 1937; Theodore Bennett, born in 1939; and Marian, born in 1941 and died in 1975. Two other daughters, Sarah, born in 1943, and Jane, born in 1945, were born in
Washington, D.C., while their father served in the production section of the research and development division of the Office of the
Quartermaster General. At the time of Chandler Robbins's death, he was described as “assistant to the president in charge of research and development” for the Bates Manufacturing Company. == Years at Eastern Point, Gloucester, Massachusetts ==