Olivia Lily Carson-Roberts

Olivia Lily Carson-Roberts

Female 1901 - 1987  (86 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Olivia Lily Carson-RobertsOlivia Lily Carson-Roberts was born on 25 Apr 1901 in Penwortham, Lancashire, England; died on 18 Sep 1987 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

    Other Events:

    • Group: John Constable Family Research
    • Birth Registration: Between 1 Apr 1901 and 30 Jun 1901, Preston Registration District, Lancashire, England; Vol. 8e, p. 505
    • 1911 England Census: 1911, London, Middlesex, England
    • 1940 Census: 15 Apr 1940, Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Preston

    Group:
    People Associated with the family of Dr. John Davidson Constable

    Birth Registration:
    Olivia Lily Roberts was born.

    1911 England Census:
    District 01 - St John - St. Marylebone - London
    60 North Gate, Regents Park, N W
    Arthur Carson-Roberts    Head  47   Married                   Barrister & Civil Servant (District Auditor)    Cheshire Frodsham
    Dora           "                  Wife  36   Married  13  3  2  1                                                                 Hampshire  Bournemouth
    Olivia Lily     "                  Dau   9                                                                                                Lancashire Penwortham
    Geoffrey       "                  Son   7                                                                                                London
    ... 4 servants

    1940 Census:
    Ward 8, ED 16-105, sheet 5E
    163 Brattle Street
    Constable, William G.      Head  M  W  52  Md   England   AL   1935: London, England  Curator of Painting - Museum Fine Arts
    ---, Olivia                          Wife   F  W  37  Md   England   AL                 "
    ---, John D.                       Son   M  W  12  S     England   AL                 "
    ---, Giles                           Son   M  W  10  S     England   AL                 "
    ... 2 servants

    Died:
    Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Death Index, 1970-2003
    Name:       Olivia Constable
    Certificate:       043911
    Death Place:       Cambridge
    Death Date:       18 Sep 1987
    Birth Place:       Other
    Birth Date:       25 Apr 1901

    Olivia married William George Constable between 1 Apr 1926 and 30 Jun 1926 in Kensington Registration District, Middlesex, England. William (son of William George Samuel Constable and Remeliah Isabella "Remie" Webb) was born on 27 Oct 1887 in Derby, Derbyshire, England; was christened on 31 Mar 1904 in Derby, Derbyshire, England; died on 3 Feb 1976 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Dr. John Davidson Constable, M. D.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Jun 1927 in London, Middlesex, England; died on 6 Jun 2016 in Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
    2. 3. Giles Constable  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Jun 1929 in London, Middlesex, England; died on 17 Jan 2021 in Princeton, Mercer County, New Jersey.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Dr. John Davidson Constable, M. D.Dr. John Davidson Constable, M. D. Descendancy chart to this point (1.Olivia1) was born on 21 Jun 1927 in London, Middlesex, England; died on 6 Jun 2016 in Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

    Other Events:

    • Group: Famous Historical Figure
    • Group: John Constable Family Research
    • Group: Researched Descendant
    • Birth Registration: Between 1 Jul 1927 and 30 Sep 1927, Chelsea Registration District, Middlesex, England; Vol. 1A, p. 455
    • 1940 Census: 15 Apr 1940, Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
    • Obituary: 13 Jun 2016, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts; Boston Globe

    Notes:

    Group:
    Famous People

    Group:
    People Associated with the family of Dr. John Davidson Constable

    Group:
    Any individual in this study whose ancestry has been specifically researched

    Birth Registration:
    John D Constable, mother maiden name Carson-Roberts, was born.

    1940 Census:
    Ward 8, ED 16-105, sheet 5E
    163 Brattle Street
    Constable, William G.      Head  M  W  52  Md   England   AL   1935: London, England  Curator of Painting - Museum Fine Arts
    ---, Olivia                          Wife   F  W  37  Md   England   AL                 "
    ---, John D.                       Son   M  W  12  S     England   AL                 "
    ---, Giles                           Son   M  W  10  S     England   AL                 "
    ... 2 servants

    Obituary:
    JOHN DAVIDSON CONSTABLE M.D.

    CONSTABLE, John Davidson MD Of Sherborn, formerly of Cambridge, died peacefully at home June 6, 2016, age 88. Son of Olivia and William G. Constable of London, England. He will be greatly missed by his wife, Sylvia P. Constable, his daughters Isabel, Mia and Clair, son-in-laws: Bruce Struminger, David Alexander and Mogador Empson, grandchildren: Sylvia, Sophie and Giles Empson, John Mittermeier; and his brother Giles Constable. A Memoral service will be held in October.

    In lieu of flowers, gifts in memory of John may be made to the John D. Constable International Traveling Fellowship Fund which supports practicing foreign plastic surgeons on US medical study tours (http://www.aaps1921.org/awards-John-D-Constable.cgi). Contributions should be made payable to the American Association of Plastic Surgeons, 500 Cummings Center, Suite 4550, Beverly, MA 01915, USA; designated Constable Fund; and are tax deductible.

    John married S. Paine [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. I.D. Constable  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 5. M. Constable  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 6. C. Constable  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 3.  Giles ConstableGiles Constable Descendancy chart to this point (1.Olivia1) was born on 1 Jun 1929 in London, Middlesex, England; died on 17 Jan 2021 in Princeton, Mercer County, New Jersey.

    Other Events:

    • Group: John Constable Family Research
    • Birth Registration: Between 1 Jul 1929 and 30 Sep 1929, Chelsea Registration District, Middlesex, England; Vol. 1a, p. 449
    • 1940 Census: 15 Apr 1940, Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
    • Obituary: 19 Jan 2021
    • Obituary: 30 Apr 2021

    Notes:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giles_Constable

    Giles Constable (born June 1, 1929 in London) is a Medieval Historian. Constable is mainly interested in the religion and culture of the 11th and 12th centuries, in particular the abbey of Cluny and its abbot Peter the Venerable.

    Constable is the son of the art historian William George Constable.

    Constable got his A.B. at Harvard University in 1950 and his Ph.D. at the same school in 1957. He taught at the University of Iowa from 1955 to 1958 and at Harvard University from 1958 to 1984. He was the Henry Charles Lea-Professor of Medieval History at Princeton University from 1966 to 1977. From 1977 to 1984 he was Director of the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library. He joined the faculty of the Institute for Advanced Studies as a Medieval History Professor in the School of Historical Studies in 2003.

    He is a member of the Medieval Academy of America and the American Philosophical Society, the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres , the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, the British Academy and the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. He was a member of the scientific council of the Revue d'Histoire Ecclésiastique.

    Group:
    People Associated with the family of Dr. John Davidson Constable

    Birth Registration:
    Giles Constable, mother maiden name Carson, was born.

    1940 Census:
    Ward 8, ED 16-105, sheet 5E
    163 Brattle Street
    Constable, William G.      Head  M  W  52  Md   England   AL   1935: London, England  Curator of Painting - Museum Fine Arts
    ---, Olivia                          Wife   F  W  37  Md   England   AL                 "
    ---, John D.                       Son   M  W  12  S     England   AL                 "
    ---, Giles                           Son   M  W  10  S     England   AL                 "
    ... 2 servants

    Obituary:
    https://www.ias.edu/news/2021/giles-constable-leading-medievalist-and-mentor-dies-91

    Giles Constable, Leading Medievalist and Mentor, Dies at 91

    Giles Constable, Professor Emeritus in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study, has passed away at the age of 91. Constable was a vigorous explorer of medieval religious and intellectual history whose expansive work has provided new and authoritative perspectives on the Middle Ages. Constable joined the Institute Faculty in 1985 and became Professor Emeritus in 2003.

    A giant in the field of medieval history, Constable is the author or editor of more than twenty books on medieval religious and intellectual history. His most influential works, centered around the religious and cultural history of the twelfth century, illuminated the origins of monastic tithes, Peter the Venerable, the people and power of Byzantium, medieval religious and social thought, the reformation of the twelfth century, twelfth-century crusading, and the history of Cluny.

    "Giles will be remembered not only for a long history of field-shaping work, but also for his generosity and leadership in lifting up a new generation of researchers," stated Robbert Dijkgraaf, IAS Director and Leon Levy Professor. "Naturally curious, his manner of leaving no stone unturned has enriched the study of medieval history in innumerable ways. He will be deeply missed."

    Constable was born in London on June 1, 1929. He was educated at Harvard (A.B. 1950; Ph.D. 1957) and at Cambridge (1952– 53). He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities in 1967.

    Prior to joining the Institute, Constable taught at the University of Iowa (1955– 58) and at Harvard University (1958– 1984). He was the Henry Charles Lea-Professor of Medieval History at Harvard University from 1966 to 1977 and served as Director of the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library from 1977 to 1984. He was a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Institut de France; Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei; American Historical Association; American Philosophical Society; Bavarian Academy of Sciences; British Academy; Instituto Lombardo, Accademia di Scienze e Lettere; and the Royal Historical Society.

    Obituary:
    https://www.doaks.org/newsletter/news-archives/2021/in-memoriam-giles-constable

    By Michael McCormick

    Giles Constable, third director of Dumbarton Oaks, former Henry C. Lea Professor of Medieval History at Harvard University and emeritus professor in the School of Historical Studies of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS), died on January 17 at his home in Princeton, NJ, of complications from longstanding ailments. Coming at a critical moment in the life of Dumbarton Oaks, Constable's directorship laid the foundations for forty years of unbroken success.

    Aptly described by the Institute of Advanced Study as "a giant in the field of medieval history," Constable was the foremost historian of medieval monasticism in our time. Born in London in 1929, he moved to Cambridge, MA, with his family in 1938. His father, the accomplished art historian W. G. Constable, a specialist notably of Canaletto, left his professorship of fine art at the University of Cambridge and directorship of the Courtauld Institute to become curator at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts. Giles Constable received his AB from Harvard College in 1950, and his PhD in medieval history in 1957. His dissertation edited the letters of Peter the Venerable, abbot of the great abbey of Cluny and one of the leading figures in twelfth-century Europe. He studied particularly under Helen Maude Cam, the first woman to serve as a professor in Harvard's Faculty of Art and Sciences, and a distinguished historian of local administration in medieval England. The ancient and medieval historian and epigrapher Herbert Bloch was his dissertation advisor. Bloch may have been Constable's first connection to Dumbarton Oaks, since Bloch, recently escaped from Fascist Italy and Germany, held a junior fellowship in Byzantine Studies in 1941– 1942, in the second year of the program's existence.

    Constable authored or edited more than twenty books on the religious and intellectual history of medieval Europe, including People and Power in Byzantium, coauthored with Alexander P. Kazhdan, the first book in English by the eminent Soviet immigrant and Dumbarton Oaks scholar. Constable always remembered with fondness his initial teaching appointment at the University of Iowa (1955– 1958), which he left to return to Harvard, where he taught and rose to tenure in the Department of History until, in 1977, he accepted the directorship of Dumbarton Oaks.

    It would be difficult to encompass Constable's permanent impact on this organization and the three fields it fosters in even a lengthy memoir. Future historians will unpack the complexity of the situation that confronted Harvard and Dumbarton Oaks when he arrived: it was far from easy or obvious. Dumbarton Oaks was, in many respects, the personal creation of Mildred and Robert Bliss and the scholars they recruited to join their enterprise. In the years following Mildred Bliss's decease (1969), Dumbarton Oaks still resembled their extended household, staffed largely by the Blisses' personal attendants, and now featuring loosely organized research nuclei of junior and senior scholars, libraries, museums, gardens, an extensively uncatalogued collection of Byzantine coins and lead seals, and various archaeological projects focusing on the Blisses' personal areas of academic interest (landscape architecture, Pre-Columbian art and archaeology and, for both Blisses, the center of gravity: the  Mediterranean humanities as epitomized by Byzantine civilization).

    Constable, by then the consummate Harvard insider as well as an internationally honored scholar, took up the directorship at this crucial turning point. In a time when some doubted whether so complex an institution could thrive as part of a distant Harvard University, he ensured this great center of humanistic learning received the structures— material, administrative, financial, institutional, and intellectual— not only to survive but to flourish and grow under his successors. Constable worked day and night to guide and shape the Blisses' inspiration into a robust permanent place of convergence and promotion of advanced humanities research and publication in its three disciplines, without neglecting the magnificent but ever-changing gardens as well as a then-obsolete physical plant. And he did so in a period when the generous endowment that powered this unique institution suffered significant erosion from global inflationary pressures.

    Constable addressed the considerable challenges of transforming this magnificent if physically deteriorating place with vigor, imagination, and discipline, in a process of academic institutionalization. The results allowed Dumbarton Oaks to rebound, survive, and live up to its vast potential for supporting and even shaping major areas of humanistic study in the United States and around the globe. Tact and firmness were indispensable in dealing with the fears and rumors rampant within Dumbarton Oaks and the broader intellectual communities it was a part of, and with the countervailing pressures emanating from Cambridge. Yet Constable's probity, good judgment, infinite patience, and quiet toughness, as well as his unparalleled understanding of the patterns of power at Harvard, allowed him to persevere and achieve remarkable results, from institutionally appropriate governance to replacing rotting roofs. He preserved Dumbarton Oaks' invaluable book and photo collections by rebuilding the parts of the original building that held them and by installing, for the first time, constant temperature and humidity controls, including air conditioning in areas of the building which henceforth allowed research to continue during Washington's subtropical summers.

    At the same time that he built Dumbarton Oaks up from the inside and in respect of its Cambridge trustees, Constable sought to open the institution to the outside. To the dismay of the staff who found their pool hours curtailed by the innovation, he unbolted the magnificent gardens to the general public in the summer. Deploying his international standing and intellectual connections, he worked ceaselessly to build closer relationships with the impressive but rather dispersed institutions of higher learning in the greater DC area, from Catholic and Georgetown Universities to the University of Maryland and, further afield, Johns Hopkins. Although permanent faculty appointments came to an end at Dumbarton Oaks, under Constable, nonpermanent research associates and senior research associates were appointed and helped foster a continuous intellectual core which expanded each semester with the research fellowships of senior scholars and graduate students, including the new and highly successful summer fellowship program that expanded manifold Dumbarton Oaks' global scholarly impact. At a time when Byzantine and late antique studies were in danger and new appointments had nearly ceased in North America, Constable created a lifeline for rising scholars by developing joint appointments of assistant professors with local universities (half-time at Dumbarton Oaks and half-time teaching and administering in the partner university department).

    Thus Constable introduced Byzantine studies to departments of Classics, Art History, and History at the University of Maryland, Johns Hopkins, Georgetown, and American University. At Harvard itself, Dumbarton Oaks professorships were created in Classics, History of Art and Architecture, and History, ensuring permanent representation of the Blisses' beloved Byzantine civilization in Harvard's undergraduate and graduate teaching and research. Following a suggestion of his Harvard colleague Ihor Ševcenko, Constable traveled to Vienna to meet the great Russian Byzantinist Alexander Kazhdan, recently prohibited from publishing and forced to leave the Soviet Union. Deeply impressed by the man and his mind, Constable organized for Kazhdan a one-year appointment at Dumbarton Oaks that turned into nineteen years of golden productivity. Kazhdan spurred a generation of younger scholars to aspire to the lofty heights he had attained, and created— with Constable's encouragement and support and with his magnificent coeditor Alice-Mary Talbot and Dumbarton Oaks staff and researchers— the indispensable companion to today's Byzantine studies. The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium (1991) is the first general reference work of its kind in the field.

    In tandem with the gifted Byzantine studies librarian, Irene Vaslef, Constable sought to expand the scope of that library from excellence in Byzantium to broad coverage of late antiquity and the medieval West, with the result that it is now possible to pursue research linking Byzantium to Western Europe and to its Roman past in ways that were impossible in 1977. Even the Friends of Music, as it was then called, attracted his close attention. He reached beyond the established performers and works to younger artists, such as the then-newly formed Emerson String Quartet. Constable preferred to promote and explore complete cycles of great works, for instance Emerson's performances of the complete string quartets of Beethoven and Shostakovich, which still ring in the ears of those privileged to hear them. A concert by Frederica von Stade, one of the artists he most prized, was a memorable moment in the events that marked in 1984 the conclusion of Constable's remarkable service as director. In 1985 he accepted an appointment to the faculty in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study, where he became emeritus in 2003. His wife, Esther Van Horne Young ("Evhy"), a children's book author who also made her mark on those privileged to know her during his directorship, died in 1987; his daughter Olivia Remie Constable, the accomplished historian of the medieval Islamic Mediterranean world, passed away in 2014. He is survived by his son, the botanist John V. H. Constable, and his loving partner, Patricia Woolf.


    Michael McCormick is Frances Goelet Professor of Medieval History at Harvard University. Image: Giles Constable in the Director's Office, 1978. Dumbarton Oaks Archives, AR.PH.DO.005.

    Giles married Esther Van Horne "Evhy" Young on 3 Jan 1959 in Van Hornesville, Herkimer County, New York. Esther (daughter of Charles Jacob Young and Esther Marie Christensen, of Cleveland) was born on 23 Mar 1932 in New York; died in 1987. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Olivia Remie Constable  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Jun 1960 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts; died on 16 Apr 2014 in South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana.
    2. 8. J.V.H. Constable  Descendancy chart to this point

    Family/Spouse: Patricia Ann Kelsh. Patricia was born on 25 Sep 1934 in Illinois; died in Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]



Generation: 3

  1. 4.  I.D. ConstableI.D. Constable Descendancy chart to this point (2.John2, 1.Olivia1)

    I.D. married R.A. Mittermeier [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. J.C. Mittermeier  Descendancy chart to this point

    I.D. married Dr. B.H.B. Struminger, M. D. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  M. ConstableM. Constable Descendancy chart to this point (2.John2, 1.Olivia1)

    Family/Spouse: D. Alexander. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 6.  C. ConstableC. Constable Descendancy chart to this point (2.John2, 1.Olivia1)

    C. married W.S.M. Empson [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. S. Empson  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 11. S. Empson  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 12. G. Empson  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 7.  Olivia Remie Constable Descendancy chart to this point (3.Giles2, 1.Olivia1) was born on 13 Jun 1960 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts; died on 16 Apr 2014 in South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana.

    Other Events:

    • Group: John Constable Family Research
    • Obituary: 18 Apr 2014, South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Birth Index, 1901-1960 and 1967-1970
    Name:       Olivia Remie Constable
    Birth Date:       1960
    Birth Place:       Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    Volume Number:       33
    Page Number:       55
    Index Volume Number:       175
    Reference Number:       F63.M362 v.175

    Group:
    People Associated with the family of Dr. John Davidson Constable

    Obituary:
    Olivia Remie Constable June 13, 1960 - April 16, 2014

    SOUTH BEND - Remie Constable, 53, died peacefully at home on April 16. A native of Boston, Remie was the daughter of the late Evhy (Young) Constable and of Giles Constable.

    She moved to South Bend in 1995 to take up a position as a professor of medieval history at the University of Notre Dame, where since 2008 she has been the Robert M. Conway Director of the Medieval Institute. Remie was a scholar of international reputation in her field, yet she wore her learning lightly and was always approachable for students and colleagues and for those she got to know socially or through her hobby of horseback riding.

    She is survived by her husband Matthew Bell and sons Owen and Sam, by her father Giles and stepmother Patricia Woolf of Princeton, NJ, and by her brother John of Fresno, CA.

    Her family is deeply grateful for support from so many quarters during Remie's illness and also appreciates the many colleagues, students, friends, and family who sent her personal messages from near and far, evidence of the affection she inspired and the sense of loss at her passing. Memorial arrangements are pending.

    In light of Remie's pronounced fondness for manatees, her family asks that donations in her memory be made to Save the Manatee Club, 500 N. Maitland Ave, Maitland, FL 32751, 800 432-5646, www.savethemanatee.org.

    Family/Spouse: Matthew Bell. Matthew was born on 16 Jan 1961; died in Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 13. O. Bell  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 14. S.T.". Bell  Descendancy chart to this point