Lurline Matson Roth
Lurline Matson Roth (1890–1985) was an American heiress, equestrian and philanthropist from San Francisco, California. She competed in horse shows in the United States, and bred award-winning horses. She donated her estate, Filoli, to the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Lurline Matson Roth | |
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Photograph published in San Francisco Call, August 17, 1913 | |
Born | September 3, 1890 |
Died | September 4, 1985 |
Education | Miss Hamlin's |
Spouse(s) | William P. Roth |
Children | William M. Roth Lurline Coonan Berenice Roth Spalding |
Parent(s) | William Matson Lillie Berenice Low |
Relatives | Charles F. Spalding (son-in-law) |
Biography
Early life
Born Lurline Berenice Matson on September 3, 1890 in San Francisco, California.[1][2] She was named Lurline after sugar magnate Claus Spreckels's yacht.[3] Her father, William Matson, was the Swedish-American founder of Matson, Inc., a shipping corporation.[1] As such she was an heiress to the Matson fortune.[4] Her mother was Lillie Berenice (Low) Matson (1864–1930).[3] She had two older brothers, Walter Joseph (1877–1926) and Theodore William Matson (1883–1936). The family wintered in a rented house in San Francisco and summered in a house near Mills College.[3]
She was educated at Miss Hamlin's, a private all-girl school in San Francisco, where she studied music and art.[3]
Equestrian
She competed in horse shows every year and won national medals.[5]
In 1924, her mother purchased the Why Worry Farm in Woodside for Lurline, where she bred horses.[1][3][6] She owned a five-gaited horse, a three-gaited horse, a Standardbred road horse, a Hackney horse, a Hackney pony and a jumper and hired a trainer, thus turning it into a show stable.[3] After she stopped competing, her horses won many equestrian awards.[1] Two of her best-known American Saddlebred horses were Chief of Longview (born at Longview Farm in Lee's Summit, Missouri) and Sweetheart on Parade.[3]
Philanthropy
During World War II, she volunteered for the American Red Cross.[3] A decade later, in 1964, she renovated Ghirardelli Square in San Francisco with her son.[1][4][7] The renovation cost US$10 million.[4]
In 1975, she donated Filoli to the National Trust for Historic Preservation.[1][8]
Personal life
She met William Philip Roth (1879–1953), a stockbroker from Honolulu, in 1913.[3] Even though her father was opposed to their relationship, they got married a year later in San Francisco, on May 27, 1914.[1][3] They had a son, William M. Roth in 1916, and two identical twin daughters, Lurline Roth Coonan and Berenice Roth Spalding, in 1920.[1][3]
They resided at Why Worry Farm with Lurline's mother, and they had another estate in Hawaii.[1][9][10] In 1937, they purchased Filoli, an estate in Woodside, California, from heir William Bowers Bourn II.[11] They often entertained guests at Filoli, including the pianist Ignace Paderewski and the aviator Amelia Earhart, who took her on a plane ride in 1937.[1]
After her husband died in 1953, she raised her children by herself at Filoli.[1] One of her daughters, Berenice, married Charles F. Spalding, an advisor to John F. Kennedy, television screenwriter, investment banker and heir to the Cudahy Packing fortune.[12]
Death
She died on Wednesday, September 4, 1985, in Burlingame, California.[1][2] She was ninety-five years old.[1]
Further reading
Susanne B. Riess, Lurline Marston Roth, Karl Kortum, Toichi Domoto. Matson and Roth family history, a love of ships, horses and gardens: oral history transcript / and related material, 1980–1989. Ulan Press. 2011. 328 pages.
References
- Burt A. Folkart, Matson Line Heiress Roth Dies After 95th Birthday : Philanthropist Lurline Roth Dies at Age 95, The Los Angeles Times, September 6, 1985
- Lurline Matson Roth, 95, daughter of the founder of the Matson shipping line, Orlando Sentinel, September 8, 1985
- Filoli: The Roths: Lurline Matson Roth & William P. Roth
- Harriet Swift, The Virago Woman's Travel Guide to San Francisco, Book Passage Press, 1994
- Thalia Lubin, Bob Dougherty, Woodside, Arcadia Publishing, 2011, p. 99
- Gerry Frank, Gerry Frank's Friday surprise: a collection of his columns from The Oregonian, Gerry's Frankly Speaking, 1995 , pp. 112; 175
- Douglas Martin, William M. Roth, Shipping Heir Who Became Lifelong Public Servant, Dies at 97, The New York Times,
- Andrew Purvis, Filoli: Garden of a Golden Age, Smithsonian Magazine, June 2010
- Felicia Warburg Roosevelt, Doers & Dowagers, New York City: Doubleday, 1975, pp. 47; 49
- John R. K. Clark, Clark: Beaches of the Big Island, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1985, p. 135
- Filoli: The Roths: The Roths at Filoli
- Charles Spalding, San Francisco Gate, December 30, 1999