Anne married in 1912 and promptly left her first husband when a Florida socialite invited her to Tampa to make a wedding dress and trousseau for her daughter. Five years later, she was accepted into New York S.T Taylor Design School. Lowe’s gifts shone and her designs were shown as examples to her white classmates, who she had to work separately from under the Jim Crow laws. After graduating, she opened Ann Lowe’s Gowns in Harlem and New York’s elite – du Ponts, Roosevelts, Rockefellers, Kennedys – quickly became frequent clients. She also made dresses for the top stores – albeit without her name on them or with her name second on the label. When she was featured in the 1966 edition of Ebony, the paper described as the ‘dynamo’, who was ‘living proof’ of how much black people can achieve, while she called herself “a terrible snob”. At the height of her popularity, she turned out an average of 1,000 gowns a year, had a staff of 35 and grossed $300,000 annually. But Lowe’s dresses were always worth more than they cost.
As is the case for many people who pave the way for others, Lowe’s story of success was undercut at each turn by discrimination. When asked who had made her wedding dress, Janet Lee, future first lady, replied ‘a coloured dress-maker’. Sixty years on, Ann Lowe should be remembered by name, as a designer and woman ahead of her time.