Theodora Alice Ruggles was born in
Brookline, Massachusetts, to Cyrus W. and Anna H. Ruggles. As a young child she displayed artistic talent, but when her mother attempted to enroll her in the
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, she was informed that she was too young to be admitted. Her mother then approached other schools, which gave her the same advice. One of the school directors, however, suggested that she find a tutor for her and pointed her in the direction of a rising star, Henry Hudson Kitson. She began studying with sculptor
Henry Hudson Kitson in 1886, and married him in Boston in 1893 in the social event of the season. They had three children together, sons Theo and John and daughter Dorothy. In 1888, she won honorable mention at the
Salon des Artistes Francais, becoming the youngest woman, and the first American woman, ever to receive the honor. She was lionized when she returned to the United States for this award and was asked to comment on everything from the state of American art to men's fashions. In 1895 she was the first woman to be admitted to the
National Sculpture Society. In the early 1900s, she designed seventy-three sculptures now located at various sites within
Vicksburg National Military Park. Predominantly busts and portrait reliefs honoring the general officers from both sides that fought there, Kitson is the most prolific of the artists represented there. The Massachusetts state monument, dedicated on November 14, 1903, was the first state monument to be placed and dedicated in the park. After the Kitsons separated in 1909, she moved to Farmington, where she maintained a studio until her 1932 death in
Boston, Massachusetts. Her work is featured on the
Boston Women's Heritage Trail. In the course of her career she created many public monuments, both in conjunction with her husband and on her own. Her best known statue is
The Hiker, a monument commemorating the soldiers who fought in the wars of the United States' turn of the 20th Century
Manifest Destiny territorial expansion, the
Spanish–American War, the
Philippine–American War and the
Boxer Rebellion. Around 50 versions of this work can be discovered spread over much of the United States. == World's Fairs ==