Henriette Deluzy-Desportes (1813–1875) was a French governess who was the subject of a scandal with Charles Laure Hugues Théobald, duc de Choiseul-Praslin. The scandal played a role in bringing down the King of France. The story of her life in Paris was the basis for a book written by her great niece and made into the movie All This, and Heaven Too starring Bette Davis in 1940. She traveled to New York City in 1848 and was hired as a schoolteacher. In 1851, she married a minister Henry Martyn Field from Stockbridge, Massachusetts and was then known as Henriette Desportes Field.
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| - Henriette Deluzy-Desportes (en)
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| - Henriette Deluzy-Desportes (1813–1875) was a French governess who was the subject of a scandal with Charles Laure Hugues Théobald, duc de Choiseul-Praslin. The scandal played a role in bringing down the King of France. The story of her life in Paris was the basis for a book written by her great niece and made into the movie All This, and Heaven Too starring Bette Davis in 1940. She traveled to New York City in 1848 and was hired as a schoolteacher. In 1851, she married a minister Henry Martyn Field from Stockbridge, Massachusetts and was then known as Henriette Desportes Field. (en)
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| - Educators from Paris
- Samuel Morse
- Bette Davis
- David Dudley Field I
- People from Stockbridge, Massachusetts
- Governesses
- Peter Cooper
- 1875 deaths
- Cooper Union
- Matthew Henry
- Françoise, duchesse de Praslin
- George Ripley (transcendentalist)
- The Marais
- The New York Times
- Louis Philippe I
- Louis Ulbach
- Lucien Bonaparte
- Sir Thomas Hislop, 1st Baronet
- Stockbridge, Massachusetts
- Frédéric Monod
- Madison Square Presbyterian Church (1854)
- 1813 births
- People from Springfield, Massachusetts
- 19th-century women artists
- William Adams (minister)
- William Allen (biographer)
- William Cullen Bryant
- Félix Desportes
- All This, and Heaven Too
- Eastman Johnson
- Brixton Hill
- Charles de Choiseul-Praslin
- Fanny Kemble
- Thomas Charles Farrer
- William Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 3rd Earl of Minto
- Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Henry Martyn Field (minister)
- Arsenic
- People from New York City
- Adolphe Monod
- Charles Loring Brace
- Charlton, London
- The Marble Faun
- Poniard
- Springfield, Massachusetts
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- National Academy of Design
- New York City
- Odilon Barrot
- Rachel Field
- Pierre Claude François Delorme
- The Evening Post
- Gramercy Park, Manhattan
- The New York Tribune
![http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Desportes,_Felix_(Decker).jpg](http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Desportes,_Felix_(Decker).jpg) ![http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:The_Cooper_Union's_Foundation_Building_-_North_Side_(48072759802).jpg](http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:The_Cooper_Union's_Foundation_Building_-_North_Side_(48072759802).jpg) ![http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Henrietta_Deluzy_Desportes_Field_(cropped).jpg](http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Henrietta_Deluzy_Desportes_Field_(cropped).jpg) ![http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Henry_Martyn_Field.jpg](http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:Henry_Martyn_Field.jpg) |
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| - Henriette Deluzy-Desportes (1813–1875) was a French governess who was the subject of a scandal with Charles Laure Hugues Théobald, duc de Choiseul-Praslin. The scandal played a role in bringing down the King of France. The story of her life in Paris was the basis for a book written by her great niece and made into the movie All This, and Heaven Too starring Bette Davis in 1940. She traveled to New York City in 1848 and was hired as a schoolteacher. In 1851, she married a minister Henry Martyn Field from Stockbridge, Massachusetts and was then known as Henriette Desportes Field. She was a member of the School of Design for Women at Cooper Union's Advisory Council from 1859, when it was founded, until her death. She was principal of the art department in the early 1860s. She exhibited her works of art at the National Academy of Design. The Fields hosted eminent writers and artists at their home in Gramercy Park, Manhattan. Some of their regular guests were Harriet Beecher Stowe and Peter Cooper. (en)
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