Clara Barkley Dorr
Clara Garnier Barkley Vienne Dorr (1825-1899) was the daughter of shipping merchant George W. Barkley and wife of timber magnate Eben Walker Dorr who built the Clara Barkley Dorr House facing Seville Square with the wealth she inherited after her husband's death.
Clara Barkley Dorr | |
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Born | 1825 Pensacola |
Died | 1899 Pensacola |
Spouse | Noel Armande Vienne (1840-1846) Eben Walker Dorr (1849-1870) |
Parents | George W. Barkley Clara Louise Garnier Barkley |
Children | Clara Garnier Dorr Blount Barkley Dorr Hawkes Dorr Walker Dorr James Dorr Mary Dorr Roberts |
Clara Garnier Barkley was born in 1825 to businessman George W. Barkley and French native Clara Louise Garnier, who built their home overlooking Pensacola Bay the same year. She married Noel Armande Vienne in 1840, but was widowed in December 1846 without children.
She remarried on December 12, 1849 to Eben Walker Dorr, the son of Sheriff Ebenezer Dorr IV. Dorr had a disability that prevented him from fighting in the Civil War and instead managed the affairs of E. E. Simpson & Company in New Orleans. The company's Bagdad mill was damaged in the war; when it was rebuilt in 1866, Dorr was made a partner.
He died of yellow fever in 1870, and Clara received his share of the mill. With this wealth she purchased land by Seville Square and built a handsome two-story home, later dubbed the Clara Barkley Dorr House. She and her children moved into the house in 1872, and she remained until 1896, when Mrs. Dorr moved into a hotel until her death in 1899.
She is buried at St. John's Cemetery, along with her husband (who, having died before the cemetery was established, was interred) and children Barkley, Walker and Mary.