Background
Harriet Randolf Hyatt was born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1868, the daughter of Audella Beebe Hyatt and Alpheus Hyatt II, the noted paleontologist.
Harriet Randolf Hyatt was born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1868, the daughter of Audella Beebe Hyatt and Alpheus Hyatt II, the noted paleontologist.
She studied art and sculpture in Boston, Massachusetts under Henry H. Kitson and Dennis Bunker.
She contributed work to the World"s Columbian Exposition, among other exhibitions. After traveling abroad with her family at an early age she began to show artistic tendencies. The 1893 World"s Columbian Exposition featured a wide assortment of American sculptors, and Hyatt had one work, Head of Laughing Girl exhibited there.
She was awarded a silver medal at the 1895 Cotton States and International Exposition.
She also exhibited her work in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Salon, Paris, 1908. Harriet was married in 1900 to the natural scientist Alfred Goldsborough Mayor, son of physicist Alfred M. Mayor.
The couple had four children, A. Hyatt, Katharine, Brantz, and Barbara. She barely escaped Germany before World War I began.
After her husband"s death in 1922, Mayor spent time traveling in Europe, and became active in the Daughters of the American Revolution, serving as regent of the Princeton, New Jersey chapter.
The association contributed to her interest in genealogy, and she made studies of the Hyatt and Mayor family trees. She died at the Huntington estate in Bethel, Connecticut, in 1960 at the age of 92.