She attended Rosemary Hall (Connecticut) and Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, NY). She was presented to Queen Mary and Edward Prince of Wales in 1935. She married Ivan Allen, Jr, on January 1, 1936, at First Presbyterian Church of Atlanta. They were the parents of three sons.
Louise served as the president of the Junior League of Atlanta during WW II, and started the charitable event, Fashionata, in conjuction with Rich's Department Stores. She was a trustee of the Henrietta Egleston Children's Hospital, a founder of the Atlanta Speech School, a founding trustee of the Westminster Schools, Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation, the Atlanta Botanical Garden, the Forward Arts Foundation, the Cherokee Garden Library, and the Historic Oakland Foundation.
She was the state Historian of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Georgia. She was a trustee for the Atlanta Historical Society, and later served as chairman and chairman emeritus. She convinced the Atlanta Historical Society to purchase the home of her late aunt and uncle, Edward and Emily Inman, called The Swan House, where the Historical Society now has its headquarters. Some of her projects there included organizing the restoration of the grounds, and procurring the Tullie Smith farmhouse and having it relocated there.
For all her efforts on behalf of Atlanta, she was recognized numerous times with various honors and awards.
Information gleaned from the obituary published in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution from June 9 to June 10, 2008
She attended Rosemary Hall (Connecticut) and Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, NY). She was presented to Queen Mary and Edward Prince of Wales in 1935. She married Ivan Allen, Jr, on January 1, 1936, at First Presbyterian Church of Atlanta. They were the parents of three sons.
Louise served as the president of the Junior League of Atlanta during WW II, and started the charitable event, Fashionata, in conjuction with Rich's Department Stores. She was a trustee of the Henrietta Egleston Children's Hospital, a founder of the Atlanta Speech School, a founding trustee of the Westminster Schools, Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation, the Atlanta Botanical Garden, the Forward Arts Foundation, the Cherokee Garden Library, and the Historic Oakland Foundation.
She was the state Historian of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Georgia. She was a trustee for the Atlanta Historical Society, and later served as chairman and chairman emeritus. She convinced the Atlanta Historical Society to purchase the home of her late aunt and uncle, Edward and Emily Inman, called The Swan House, where the Historical Society now has its headquarters. Some of her projects there included organizing the restoration of the grounds, and procurring the Tullie Smith farmhouse and having it relocated there.
For all her efforts on behalf of Atlanta, she was recognized numerous times with various honors and awards.
Information gleaned from the obituary published in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution from June 9 to June 10, 2008
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