Elizabeth Jarvis Colt
Elizabeth Hart Jarvis Colt (October 5, 1826 – November 21, 1905) was an American businesswoman and philanthropist best known as the widow of firearms inventor Samuel Colt, whom she married in 1856, and for her stewardship of the Colt Patent Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company after his death in 1862.[1] Born in Saybrook, Connecticut, to Episcopal minister William Jarvis and his wife Elizabeth, she inherited controlling interest in the company, which she managed successfully for nearly 40 years alongside family members, including rebuilding the armory after a devastating 1864 fire with fireproof features and its signature blue onion dome.[2][3] Despite enduring profound personal losses—four of her five children died in infancy or early childhood, and her only surviving son perished at age 35 in 1894—she channeled her substantial wealth into Hartford's civic life, founding organizations like the Union for Home Work to support working mothers, constructing the Gothic Revival Church of the Good Shepherd in 1869 as a memorial to her family, and amassing an art collection of over 1,000 pieces bequeathed to the Wadsworth Atheneum along with $50,000, establishing the museum's first wing named for a woman patron.[1][2][3] Her legacy as "the First Lady of Hartford" endures through enduring institutions, public parks developed from her estate grounds, and the continued operation of the company she preserved during the Civil War era and beyond.[1][3]