1962 | The Mary Parsons Collection
John E. Parsons died in 1915, leaving his fortune and property to his six children. To his two unmarried daughters, Mary (1863-1940) and Gertrude (1870-1927), he left Stonover Estate in Lenox, Massachusetts. The sisters, then in their 50s, immediately set out on adventures to China and Europe and remodeled the Victorian manor into a French country home with yellow stucco and a sprawling terrace for summer parties. The lavish parties they hosted included after-dinner lectures from academics, artists, and revolutionaries including Aleksandr Kerensky (1881-1970), a key figure in the Russian Revolution (1917).
After Gertrude’s death, Parsons threw herself into her passion for conservation and in 1929 she founded the 350-acre Pleasant Valley Sanctuary in Lenox. She opened the trails on her estate to fellow nature enthusiasts and in the 1930s reintroduced beavers to the state.
Between creating a sanctuary and hosting a weekly lecture series, Parsons befriended the brothers and sisters at the local Shaker communities. In 1938 she purchased a collection of furniture and objects directly from the Shakers to decorate a bird sanctuary barn on her property. Twenty years after her death Shaker Community, Inc. acquired 50 of those pieces. Parsons was fondly remembered by her friend Amy Bess Miller as having “not one pretense about her.”









