Florence Elfelt Bramhall (April 2, 1862 – December 22, 1924) was an American clubwoman and forest conservationist, based in Minnesota.
[1][2] Her parents were both born in Pennsylvania; her family was Jewish,[3] and her father was a founder and president of the B'nai B'rith Lodge in Saint Paul.
[14] In 1903 Bramhall declined a nomination for president of the Minnesota Federation of Women's Clubs, preferring not to compete with "even a respectable minority opposition" for the executive post.
[15][16] In 1904, she represented Minnesota state forestry association at a national congress on forestry held in Washington, D.C., when Theodore Roosevelt delivered the address "The Forest in the Life of a Nation.
Her first husband was Bahamas fisheries owner Robert Francis Pyfrom; they married in 1883[18] and divorced a few years later.