sketcher, was a Miss Blackman before her marriage. Her son, W. T. Strutt, became the Tasmanian government printer. Mrs Strutt’s watercolour flower study and a charcoal head of a dog, both said to have been drawn about 1853, are in the Van Diemen’s Land Folk Museum in Hobart, which also holds a miniature watercolour portrait of her by an unknown artist dating from before her marriage. The collection was donated to the museum in 1962 by Miss E.G. Conor, Mrs Strutt’s great-granddaughter. The family is not related to the painter William Strutt .
This entry is a stub. You can help DAAO by submitting a biography.