Background
She was the daughter of vaudevillian George Willson and Hannah Murray Willson.
She was the daughter of vaudevillian George Willson and Hannah Murray Willson.
The couple had five sons, but began to drift apart in the mid-1920s, when Millicent tired of her husband"s longtime affair with actress Marion Davies. After a six-year courtship, the publisher and aspiring politician Hearst married 22-year-old Millicent Willson on April 28, 1903. Millicent gave birth to five sons: George Randolph Hearst, born on April 23, 1904.
William Randolph Hearst, Junior., born on January 27, 1908.
John Randolph Hearst, born in 1910. And the twins, Randolph Apperson Hearst and David Whitmire (née Elbert Willson) Hearst, born on December 2, 1915.
Hearst"s mother, Phoebe Apperson Hearst, was dismayed by Millicent’s humble origins, but warmed to her daughter-in-law with the birth of the grandchildren. New York Mayor John Hylan appointed her Chairman of the Mayor’s Committee of Women on National Defense during World War I. The committee sponsored entertainments for servicemen, operated a canteen, encouraged enlistments, sponsored patriotic rallies and provided staples such as coal, milk, and ice to the needy.
Hearst also served on wartime committees to raise funds for the rebuilding of France and the relief of French orphans.
In 1921, she founded the Free Milk Fund for Babies, which provided free milk to the poor of New York City for decades. She also hosted charitable fund raisers for a variety of causes including crippled children, unemployed girls, the New York Women's Trade League, the Democratic National Committee, the Evening Journal - New York Journal Christmas Fund, and the Village Welfare of Portuguese Washington, New New York Eleanor Roosevelt joined Millicent Hearst at many of these charitable events during the Great Depression.
The Hearsts remained married until his death in 1951, but were estranged beginning in 1926 when his liaison with Marion Davies became public.
She was a member of the New York State Commission for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915. And acted as chief official hostess at the New York Pavilion during the exposition.