Charlotte M. Davies Tytus (1852-1936)

I thought I would start the ball rolling for Judy, by writing something about Charlotte M. Davies. When Judy sent me a GEDCOM, lo these many years ago, of the Davies family, I got interested in the Tytus family. The Tytus family was from Middletown, Ohio which is not so far from Cincinnati and some of my family lines. It turns out that it isn’t easy to track the Davies, or Charlotte who married into the Tytus family. Here is a first take on her life.

Charlotte Mathilda Davies was born in Newark, New Jersey on the first of October, 1852 (1). She was the youngest (at least found) of the children born to John May Davies and Alice Sophia (Hopper) Davies. Her next oldest siblings were her sister Alice, who was 5 years older, and her brother Cornelius, who was 6 years older. These three formed almost a second family for the elder Davies. Two sons had died young, in 1845 and 1846, and then there were the oldest siblings who had been born in the late 1830s and who probably were out of the house by the time Charlotte was born. The federal census of 1850 only listed older sister Louisa and then Alice and Cornelius at home. I haven’t yet found the 1860 census listing this Davies family.

Davies 1870 census

The 1870 census found the family consisting of John and Alice (parents), the two daughters (Alice and Charlotte), and 6 servants. Son Cornelius lived next door (? or was enumerated as a separate household anyway) with his young wife and a gardener. And here I will leave the Davies for Judy to pursue.

Charlotte was married June 24, 1874 to Edward Jefferson Tytus. Edward was born August 22, 1847 in Middletown, Ohio to Francis Jefferson and Sarah (Butler) Tytus (2). He was “prepared for college at home by Mr. J. F. Elder” and attended Yale College, graduating in the class of 1868. It seems likely, though there is no documentation found yet, that Edward and Charlotte met in New Haven as a result of his connection with Yale. He was in the paper warehouse business in Milwaukee, following his graduation, first with a younger brother and then as Tytus, Van Buren and Co. His partnership was dissolved in the fall of 1874, following his marriage. April of 1875 found Edward and his young wife applying for a passport and traveling to Europe. This may have been their honeymoon trip. According to the biography published for his Yale class, Edward and Charlotte returned to the United States from Europe in the fall of 1875 since Edward’s health was bad. Edward had been advised to spend the winter in more salubrious weather than Connecticut or New York, so they went to Asheville, North Carolina. Edward and Charlotte’s only child, a son named Robb DePeyster Tytus or maybe Robert Davies Tytus, was born in Asheville in February 1876. (This son has his own interesting story and will probably show up in a post of his own at some point.) Edward died of tuberculosis 19 May 1881, at Saranac Lake, New York.

Charlotte was 29 years old when she was widowed and left with a young son. It seems likely that she returned to the house in New Haven to live with her mother at first. A number of city directories for New Haven show her as there from 1882 to 1896, and for some of that period her son was a Yale student. The directory for 1898 lists both of them as removed to New York. An article about New York American Guild of Organists (3) reports that Mrs. Charlotte Tytus acquired or built a townhouse at 10 East 77th Street around 1896 and lived there until about 1904. From 1882 on, Charlotte traveled to Europe frequently, and in Egypt

Charlotte M. Tytus, c 1920
with her son. This picture, from her 1920 passport application, is one of two I have found of her so far.

Around 1920 or 1921 Charlotte became more actively involved with the Dominican Fathers, and she is credited with having founded Blackfriars in Oxford, England, although it seems more accurate to note that she contributed the financial means to purchase the property that houses the group (4,5). She spent more and more time abroad: her son died (also of tuberculosis) in 1913 and she and her daughter-in-law may not have gotten along particularly well. Her daughter-in-law had also remarried. The article on Blackfriars includes information about Charlotte and her life, not all of which is accurate, and notes the many unanswered questions about this solitary woman. Charlotte died in London, at the Dorchester Hotel, 2 April 1936. She had outlived her husband, her son, her daughter-in-law, and all of her siblings. She had two granddaughters, from whom she seems to have been estranged.

1 “New Jersey Births and Christenings, 1660-1980.” index, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org): accessed 11 February 2012. entry for Charlotte Davies, born 1 October 1852; citing Births Newark City V. L 1848-1867 , FHL microfilm 584562; Index entries derived from digital copies of original and compiled records.

2 Wright, Henry Parks, Yale College Class of 1868. History of the class of 1868: Yale College, 1864-1914. New Haven : Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Press, 1914. This year of birth has been used in a number of references. However, a compilation about the Butler family, “The Family of Rev. John Butler” lists his birth year as 1845. So far I have not discovered any primary source of evidence.

3 http://www.nycago.org/Organs/NYC/html/ResTytusCM.html, website accessed 2/11/2012

4 Kerr, Fergus. Mrs. Tytus: Founder of Blackfriars, Oxford. New Blackfriars, 2006 87 (1007), 72-82

5 http://www.bfriars.ox.ac.uk/about_dominicans.php, accessed 2/12/2012

3 Comments on “Charlotte M. Davies Tytus (1852-1936)

  1. LAMPS PHILIPPE

    This must have been the same Charlotte Davies. What is the name of your town and of the school?
    Charlotte was my great, great grandmother. Her son Robb DePeyster Tytus was my great grandfather, and he died in 1913. I believe my father and my uncle are her only surviving great grandchildren.

    Elizabeth

  2. Hello ! I’m french. Sorry if my english is’nt very good. I’m looking for an american lady : Mrs Charlotte (C.M.) Tytus or Tytus-Jefferson or Jefferson-Tytus. In 1923, she has given many money to build a school for boys in my town, in north of France. Because my town was destroyed completly by german shelling.She was converted at catholicism. Her only son was died before 1923. Do you think that I found the good lady ? If it’s good, do you know where she lives ? Many thanks. Philippe Lamps

  3. Another interesting post — enjoying your blog! I came across a bit of information on Charlotte’s son — including his name change — found on pg. 643 of the 1913-1914 edition of the Obituary Record of Yale Graduates (online at: http://mssa.library.yale.edu/obituary_record/1859_1924/1913-14.pdf)
    ~~~
    ROBB DEPEYSTER TYTUS, son of Edward Jefferson Tytus (B.A Yale 1868), was born February 2, 1876, in Asheville, N. C His mother was Charlotte Mathilde Davies, daughter of John M. Davies, of New Haven His name originally was Robert Davies Tytus, but was changed by legislative act in his ninth year. After his father’s death in 1881 he lived much in New Haven. He was prepared for college at St. Mark’s School, Southboro, Mass After graduation he spent several years abroad, studying art in London, Pans, and Munich, and from 1899 to 1903 conducting excavations under concessions from the Egyptian government He published a “Preliminary Report on the Reexcavation of the Palace of Amenhotep III,” illustrated by himself in color, New York, 1903, a poem, “The Vow,” also “On the Nile” (the latter in collaboration with Mrs, Tytus and illustrated), both in Harper’s Monthly, 1904; both text and illustrations in color for “Saida,” a serial story in the Burr Mclntosh Monthly, and “The River God,” a story in the Metropolitan Magazine; also illustrations for Mrs Tytus’s story, “Third Edition,” in the Century, 1906 Upon his return from abroad in 1903 he purchased a large tract of land in Tynngham, Mass, where he engaged in raising cattle and sheep and m practical farming. He took a deep interest in the affairs of the town, and in 1908 and 1909 he was elected a representative m the Massachusetts Legislature He was a director of the Lee National Bank, and the Lee Hotel Company, and was a vestryman of St George’s Church m Lee. He received the degree of Master of Arts from Yale in 1903. Mr Tytus died of pulmonary tuberculosis at Saranac Lake, N Y, August 14, 1913, at the age of 37 years He married, in New York City, May 19, 1903, Grace Seely Henop, daughter of Louis P and Alice (Seely) Henop, who survives him with two daughters. His mother is also living. He was a cousin of his classmate John Butler Tytus

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