Anne Windfohr Marion (born Anne Valliant Burnett Hall; November 10, 1938 – February 11, 2020) was an American heiress, rancher, horse breeder, business executive, philanthropist, and art collector from Fort Worth, Texas.
[1] Anne Valliant Burnett Hall was born and grew up in Fort Worth, Texas.
[10][14] Marion served as president and trustee of the Anne Burnett and Charles D. Tandy Foundation.
With a gift of $10 million from the foundation, she founded the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
[3][5] She helped move the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame from Hereford, Texas to Fort Worth.
[17] She selected members of the board of trustees alongside business executive Ed Bass.
[3][5] She endowed a professorship at the Ranching Management School of Texas Christian University (TCU) in Fort Worth.
Her second husband was Benjamin Franklin (B. F.) Phillips, a horseman; they owned several successful racehorses including Dash For Cash and Streakin Six.
[23] She married her fourth husband, John L. Marion, at the Church of the Heavenly Rest on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City, in 1988.
[4] She lived in the Westover Hills neighborhood of Fort Worth, Texas, in a 19,000-square-foot modernist home on Shady Oaks Lane, designed for her mother by I. M. Pei in the 1960s.
She owned secondary residences in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Indian Wells, California, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and an apartment at 820 Fifth Avenue, New York.