Background
She was the daughter of Mary and Horton L. Parmelee, a farmer.
She was the daughter of Mary and Horton L. Parmelee, a farmer.
Parmelee studied under Henry Bryant of Hartford beginning in 1872 and the following year with Nathaniel Jocelyn in New Haven. She studied for a year at the Yale Art School, which had just begun admitting women, under Robert Walter Weir. Still stating to others that she was still a student, she opened a studio in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1875.
Parmelee later traveled to Paris and attended the Académie Julian from 1881 to 1884 where she studied with Joseph-Nicolas Robert-Fleury, Pierre Auguste Cot, and Jules Joseph Lefebvre.
Parmelee born in Guilford, Connecticut. Her older siblings were Emily, Charles, Mary, and Jane. She was a career portrait artist and operated a studio in Springfield, Massachusetts from 1875 to 1929.
Parlee painted the portrait of Marcus Perrin Knowlton, Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, made after a photogravure, in 1912.
lieutenant hung in the court house in Springfield following a formal presentation ceremony at the fourth annual Massachusetts Bar Association meeting in December of that year. She was paid $1,125 (equivalent to $26,578 in 2016) for the framed painting.
Parmelee made a portrait of Samuel Bowles, III, who was an editor of the Republican and a City Library Association member for 37 years and was on the board of directors for 24 years. She died on August 29, 1934 in Los Angeles, California.
Doctor Massachusetts Historical Society.