To Marry an English Lord

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by gail maccoll


  PORTLAND PLACE.

  Below Regent’s Park. No. 3: home of Grace Bruce Carr, Baroness Newborough after her marriage in 1900. No. 8: home of Maude Lorillard Baring until she moved to Bryanston Square.

  PORTMAN SQUARE.

  No. 8: home of Alberta Sturges, future Countess of Sandwich. No. 15: H.R.H.’s daughter Princess Louise and her husband, the Duke of Fife. No. 30: Mrs. George Keppel. No. 45: Consuelo, Duchess of Manchester.

  PRINCE’S GATE.

  No. 14: occupied by J. Pierpont Morgan. No. 16: Lord and Lady Cheylesmore, who, deigning to exist outside Maytair, were credited by the Tatler for “a worthy keeping up of old traditions.” No. 42: Charles Bonynge and his daughter and son-in-law, the Viscount and Viscountess Deerhurst.

  RICHMOND TERRACE, WHITEHALL.

  No. 4: for years the town address of Elizabeth Cavendish-Bentinck, one of the premier social godmothers and an Old New York girl to boot.

  ST: JAMES’S SQUARE.

  No. 4: the town residence of Nancy Astor. The Randolph Churchills, in their early married life, lived in nearby St. James’s Street; next door was Sir Stafford Northeote, whose son married American Edith Livingston Fish. Clubs. 28: Boodles. 37: White’s. 69: Carlton. 74: Conservative.

  SLOANE STREET.

  No. 122: home of American heiress Rosalind Secor, Lady Chetwynd. Down the street, at Holy Trinity, Florence Garner married Sir William Gordon-Cumming.

  * * *

  In 1919 American social climber Mrs. William Leeds was looking forward to the big dinner she’d planned at the Ritz for Prince Christopher of Greece when Minnie Paget, who had been her social guide, died suddenly on the day of the party. Not wanting to disturb all her arrangements, Mrs. Leeds simply didn’t announce the death and gave the dinner regardless. Five months later, Minnie’s wardrobe was sold by auction in London; her famous Cleopatra costume, made by Worth, went for a little more than £9.

  * * *

  BIBLIOGRAPHY/SELECTED READING

  FICTION

  ATHEKION, GERTRUDE. American Wives and English Husbands. Service & Paton, 1898.

  ——. Tower of Ivory. John Murray, 1910.

  HARRISON, CONSTANCY CARY. Anglomaniacs. Casscll, 1890.

  JAMES, HENRY. The Ambassadors. Penguin, 1973.

  ——. The American. Penguin, 1981.

  ——. The Europeans. Penguin, 1964.

  ——. The Golden Bowl. Oxford, 1983.

  ——. A London Life. Scribner’s, 1907.

  ——. The Portrait of a Lady. Penguin, 1984.

  ——. The Reverberator. Grove Press, 1885.

  ——. Washington Square. Signet, 1964.

  ——. The Wings of the Dove. Penguin, 1982. Short Stories: “A Bundle of Letters,” “Crapy Cornelia,” “Daisy Miller,” “An International Episode,” “Lady Barbarina,” “Lord Beaupré,” “Miss Gunton of Poughkeepsie,” “Mrs. Medwin,” “Pandora,” “The Pension Beaurepas,” “Point of View,” “The Siege of London.”

  RAE, WILLIAM FRASER. An American Duchess. R. Bentley & Son, 1891.

  ——. Miss Bayle’s Romance. H. Holt & Co., 1887.

  SACKVILI.E-WEST, VITA. The Edwardians. Avon, 1983.

  SHERWOOD, MARY E. A Transplanted Rose. Harper & Bros., 1882.

  TROLLOPE, ANTHONY. The Duke’s Children. Oxford, 1954.

  ——. The Way We Live Now. Oxford, 1982.

  WHARTON, EDITH. The Age of Innocence. Scribner’s, 1970.

  ——. The Buccaneers. Appleton-Century, 1938.

  ——. The Custom of the Country. Seribner’s, 1913.

  ——. The House of Mirth, Bantam, 1984.

  Short Stories: “Autres Temps,” “Madame de Treymes.”

  NONFICTION

  ALSOP, SUSAN MARY. Lady Sackville. Avon, 1978.

  AMORY, CLEVELAND. Who Killed Society? Harper & Row, 1960.

  ANDREWS, ALLEN. The Splendid Pauper. Harrap, 1968.

  ASTOR, MICHAEL. Tribal Feeling. John Murray, 1963.

  ATHERTON, GERTRUDE. Adventures of a Novelist. Jonathan Cape, 1932.

  ——. Can Women Be Gentlemen? Houghton Mifflin, 1938.

  BAKER, PAUL. Richard Morris Hunt. M.I.T., 1980.

  BALSAN, CONSUELO VANDERBIIT. The Glitter and the Gold. Harper & Bros., 1952.

  Bancroft’s Americans’ Guide to London. Bancroft, 1901-06.

  BARRETT, RICHMOND. Good Old Summer Days. Appleton-Century, 1941.

  BARROW, ANDREW. Gossip. Pan Books, 1978.

  BATTISCOMBE, GEORGINA. Life of Queen Alexandra. Constable, 1969.

  BEEBE, LUCIUS. The Big Spenders. Doubleday, 1966.

  BEERBOHM, MAX. Things Old and New. Heinemann, 1923.

  BERLIN, ELLIN. Silver Platter. Doubleday, 1957.

  BLUNDEN, MARGARET. The Countess of Warwick. Cassell, 1967.

  BOURGET, PAUL. Outre-Mer. Scribner’s, 1895.

  BRANDON, RUTH. The Dollar Princesses. Alfred A. Knopf, 1980.

  BRIDGE, JAMES HOWARD (pseud. Harold Brydges). Uncle Sam at Home. H. Holt &Co., 1888.

  BROWN, MARY MACDONALD. Amazing New York. Andrew Melrose, 1913.

  BROUGH, JAMES. Consuelo. Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1979.

  CABLE, MARY. American Manners & Morals. American Heritage, 1969.

  ——. Top Drawer. Atheneum, 1984.

  CAMPBELL, CHARLES SUTTER. Anglo-American Understanding, 1898-1903. Johns Hopkins Press, 1957.

  Catalog of Memorial Exhibition of the Works of John Singer Sargent. Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), 1925.

  CHURCHILL, ALLEN. The Splendor Seekers. Grossett & Dunlap, 1947.

  CHURCHILL, PEREGRINE, and JULIAN MITCHELL. Jennie. St. Martin’s, 1974.

  CHURCHILL, LADY RANDOLPH. Small Talks on Big Subjects. Pearson, 1916.

  CHURCHILL, RANDOLPH. Fifteen Famous English Homes. Verschoyle, 1954.

  CHURCHILL, WINSTON. My Early Life. Scribner’s, 1930.

  CLEWS, HENRY. Twenty-Eight Years in Wall Street. Sampson Low, Markson, Searle and Rivington, 1888.

  COLLIER, PRICE. England and the English. Scribner’s, 1914.

  COOPER, NICHOLAS. The Opulent Eye. Architectural Press, 1976.

  CORELLI, MARIE, with Lady Jeune, Flora Annie Steel, and Susan, Countess of Malmesbury. The Modern Marriage Market. Hutchinson, 1898.

  CORNWALLIS-WEST, GEORGE. Edwardian Heydays. Putnam’s, 1930.

  COWLES, VIRGINIA. The Astors. Alfred A. Knopf, 1979.

  ——. Edward VII and His Circle. Hamish Hamilton, 1956.

  CROWNINSHIELD, FRANK.“The House of Vanderbilt.” Vogue, Nov. 15, 1941.

  DEMARLY, DIANA. History of Haute Couture. Holmes & Meier, 1980.

  DOWNES, WILLIAM HOWE. John S. Sargent. Butterworth, 1926.

  DUMAURIER, GEORGE. Society Pictures. Bradbury, Agnew, 1891.

  EDEL, LEON.“Henry James, Edith Wharton, and Newport.” Redwood Library & Athenaeum (Newport), 1966.

  ——. The Life of Henry James. Penguin, 1977.

  ELIOT, ELIZABETH. Heiresses & Coronets. McDowell, Obolensky, 1959.

  ELLIOTT, MAUD HOWE. This Was My Newport. Mythology, 1944.

  ——. Three Generations. Little, Brown, 1923.

  ESCOTT, THOMAS HAY SWEET King Edward & His Court. Unwin, 1903.

  ——. Society in London. Chatto & Windus, 1885.

  ENSOR, R.C.K. England: 1870-1914. Oxford, 1946.

  FIELD, LESLIE. The Queen’s Jewels. Harry N. Abrams, 1987.

  FIELDING, DAPHNE. Duchess of Jermyn Street. Eyre & Spottiswode, 1964.

  ——. Emerald and Nancy. Eyre & Spottiswode, 1968.

  FISKE, STEPHEN. Offhand Portraits of Eminent New Yorkers. Lockwood & Sons, 1884.

  FLOWER, SYBILLA JANE, comp. Debrett’s Stately Homes of England. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1982.

  FRIEDMAN, BERNARD HARPER. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. Doubleday, 1978.

  GERNSHEIM, ALISON. Victorian & Edwardian Fashion: A Photographic Survey. Dover, 1981.

  GREEN, DAVID. The Churchills of Blenheim. Constable, 1984.

  GRISWOLD, FRANK GRAY. Aftertho
ughts. Harper & Bros., 1936.

  HARRISON, CONSTANCE CARY. Our Best Society. Century, 1899.

  HARRISON, ROSINA. Rose: My Life in Service. Viking, 1975.

  HARTZELL, A.E., comp. Titled Americans. Street & Smith, 1890.

  HIBBERT, CHRISTOPHER. Edward VII: A Portrait. Penguin, 1976.

  HILLS, PATRICIA. John Singer Sargent. Whitney Museum, 1987.

  HUGHES, ALICE. My Father and I. Butterworth, 1923.

  JAMES, HENRY. Portraits of Places. James R, Osgood, 1884.

  JAMES, ROBERT RHODES. Lord Randolph Churchill. A.S. Barnes, 1960.

  JOSEPHSON, MATTHEW. The Bobber Barons. Harcourt, Brace, 1934.

  “JUVENAL.” An Englishman in New York. Stephen Swift, 1911.

  LAMBERT, ANGELA. Unquiet Souls. Harper & Row, 1984.

  LANG, THEO. The Darling Daisy Affair. Atheneum, 1966.

  LANGHORNE, ELIZABETH. Nancy Astor and Her Friends. Praeger, 1974.

  LEGGETT, FRANCES. Late & Soon. Houghton Mifflin, 1968.

  LEHR, ELIZABETH DREXEL. King Lehr & the Gilded Age. Lippincott, 1935.

  ——. Turn of the World. Lippincott, 1937.

  LESLIE, ANITA. Lady Randolph Churchill. Scribner’s, 1969.

  ——. The Marlborough House Set. Doubleday, 1973.

  ——. The Remarkable Mr. Jerome. Henry Holt, 1954.

  LESLIE, SEYMOUR. The Jerome Connection. John Murray, 1964.

  LESLIE, SHANE. Studies in Sublime Failure. Ernest Benn, 1932.

  LEWIS, R.W.B. Edith Wharton. Harper & Row, 1975.

  LONGFORD, ELIZABETH. Louisa, Lady in Waiting. Mayflower, 1981.

  ——. Victoria R.I. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1964.

  MCALLISTER, WARD. Society as I Have Found It. Cassell, 1890.

  MAGNUS, PHILIP. Life of Edward VII. Dutton, .1964.

  MANCHESTER, WILLIAM ANGUS DROGO MONTAGU, 9th Duke. My Candid Reflections. Grayson & Grayson, 1932.

  MARTIN, FREDERICK TOWNSEND. Passing of the Idle Rich. Doubleday Page, 1911.

  ——. Things I Remember. John Lane, 1913.

  MARTIN, RALPH G. Jennie: The Life of Lady Randolph Churchill. Vol. I: The Romantic Years. Signet, 1969. Vol. 2: The Dramatic Liars. Prentice-Hall, 1971.

  MITFORD, NANCY. Noblesse Oblige. Futura, 1980.

  MOONEY, MICHAEL. Evelyn Nesbit & Stanford White. Morrow, 1976.

  MORRIS, LLOYD R. Incredible New York. Random House, 1951.

  MURPHY, SOPHIA. The Duchess of Devonshire’s Ball. Sidgwick & Jackson, 1984.

  NAPIER, ELMA. Youth Is a Blunder. Jonathan Cape, 1948.

  NICHOLLS, CHARLES WILBUR DE LYON. The Ultra-fashionable Peerage of America. Arno, 1976.

  NICOLSON, NIGEL. Mary Curzon. Harper & Row, 1977.

  O’CONNOR, RICHARD. The Golden Summers. Putnam’s, 1974.

  OLIAN, JOANNE. The House of Worth: The Gilded Age, 1860-1918. Museum of the City of New York, 1982.

  PEACOCK, VIRGINIA. Famous American Belles of the Nineteenth Century. Lippincott, 1901.

  PEARSON, HESKETH. The Pilgrim Daughters. Heinemann, 1961.

  PLESS, DAISY, PRINCESS OF. By Herself. John Murray, 1928.

  POIRET, PAUL. My First Fifty Years. Victor Gollancz, 1931.

  PULITZER, RALPH. New York Society on Parade. Harper & Bros., 1920.

  RATCLIFF, CARTER. Sargent. Abbeville, 1982.

  ROSKILL, STEPHEN. Admiral of the Fleet Earl Beatty: The Last Naval Hero. Atheneum, 1981.

  ST. HELIER, MARY JANE (Lady). Memories of Fifty Years. Edward Arnold, 1909.

  SAUNDERS, EDITH. The Age of Worth. Indiana University, 1955.

  SLADEN, DOUGLAS, and W. WIGMORE, eds. Green Book of London Society. J. Whitaker & Sons, 1910.

  STEAD, W.T. The Americanization of the World. Horace Markley, 1901.

  STERN, ROBERT A.M., GREGORY GILMARTIN and JOHN MASSENGALE. New York 1900. Rizzoli, 1983.

  STONE, LAWRENCE and JEANNE C. An Open élite? England, 1540-1880. Oxford, 1984.

  SWANBERG, W.A. Whitney Father, Whitney Heiress. Scribner’s, 1980.

  SWEETSER, M.R, and SIMEON FORD. How to Know New York City. J.J. Little, 1890.

  SYKES, CHRISTOPHER. Four Studies in Loyalty. Collins, 1946.

  ——. Nancy: The Life of Nancy Astor. Harper & Row, 1972.

  THOMPSON, F.M.L. English Landed Gentry in the Nineteenth Century. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1963.

  VANDERBILT, CORNELIUS. Queen of the Gilded Age. McGraw-Hill, 1956.

  ——. The Vanderbilt Feud. Hutchinson, 1957.

  VAN RENSSELAER, MAY KING. Newport, Our Social Capital. Lippincott, 1905.

  VlCKERS, HUGO. Gladys, Duchess of Marlborough. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1979.

  WARWICK, FRANCES, COUNTESS OF. Afterthoughts. Cassell, 1931.

  ——. Discretions. Scribner’s, 1931.

  ——. Life’s Ebb & Flow. Hutchinson, 1929.

  WECTER, DIXON. The Saga of American Society. Scribner’s, 1937.

  WHARTON, EDITH. A Backward Glance. Scribner’s, 1933.

  WILDE, OSCAR. Impressions of America. Keystone Press, 1906.

  WORTH, JEAN PHILIPPE. A Century of Fashion. Little, Brown, 1928.

  INDEX

  A | B | C | D | E

  F | G | H | I | J

  K | L | M | N | O

  P | Q | R | S | T

  V | W | Y | Z

  (Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations. Page numbers in boldface refer to entries for individual heiresses in register.)

  A

  Abercorn, Duke of, 127

  Academy of Music, New York City, 9, 12, 62

  ball for Prince of Wales at, 3, 3

  demise of, 62, 63

  Acheson, Archibald, Viscount, see Gosford, Archibald Acheson, 5th Earl of

  Adair, Cornelia (née Wadsworth; formerly Mrs. Montgomery Ritchie), 123, 167, 186, 271, 279, 309, 354, 354, 356, 362

  Adair, John, 123, 309, 354

  Adam, Robert, 110, 195

  Adultery:

  as grounds for divorce, 311, 312

  see also Extramarital affairs; Mistresses

  After-dinner calls, 8

  Afternoon dresses, 233, 233

  Afternoon tea, romantic liaisons at, 255–58

  Age of Innocence, The (Wharton), 33

  Agricultural depression (1870s), 105–6, 125, 158

  Albemarle Street, London, 360

  Albert, Prince Consort of England, 16, 17, 268, 319

  death of, 15–16, 84

  son reared to be exemplar of modern monarch by, 20–21

  Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, see Edward VII, King of England

  Albert Gate, London, 364

  Aldford Street, London, 360

  Alexander of Teck, Prince and Princess, 307

  Alexandra, Queen Consort of England (formerly Princess of Wales), 16, 17, 17, 24, 25, 38, 72, 217, 247, 250, 269, 290, 294, 319

  coronation of, 276–81, 279, 281

  country houses visited by, 284, 288, 289

  deafness of, 251, 274

  husband’s amorous intrigues and, 251, 254

  staff of, 289

  tiara worn well by, 293

  weddings attended by, 306–7

  “Alexandra limp,” 83

  Altiora Peto (Oliphant), 238

  Altyre, Morayshire, redecorated in Louis style, 229–30

  Alva, 156

  menu for luncheon on board, 147

  America:

  emptiness of social life in, 264–65

  English alliance with, 270–74

  heiress-hunting Englishmen in, 123–37

  as imperial republic, 318

  public role unacceptable for women in, 200–201, 202

  American Aristocrats, 138–79, 270, 302

  bourgeois values of, 234–35, 246

  Consuelo Vanderbilt as exemplar of, 148–76

  European aristocratic life emulated by, 141

  European travels of, 139–41

  marriage settlements of, 166–67

  Newport season of, 141–47

  opulent homes o
f, 139, 142–43, 172–73, 172, 173

  rigid etiquette enforced by, 143–46

  upbringing of, 148–49

  weddings of, 169–79, 169, 170, 176, 178, 179

  American Beauty Rose, 99

  American Duchess, An (Rae), 238

  American Girl in London, An (Cotes), 238

  American heiresses:

  appeal of, 98–99

  brothers who married, 332

  Continental titles sought by, 163

  cousins who married, 343

  deification of, 66–67

  demand vs. command as forte of, 198–99

  divorces of, 311–12, 315–16

  English girls no competition for, 94, 98–101

  Englishmen’s journeys in search of, 123–37

  father-son duos who married, 347

  finally titled by kingly act, 275

  James’s portrayals of, 96–97

  London accommodations of, 102

  mother-daughter duos, 308, 309

  New, 302–10

  number of matches for, in 1895, 165

  points in campaign of, 102–3

  press coverage sought by, 103

  register of, 323–57

  as salvation of Marlborough House Set, 95

  second marriages to, 350

  sister acts, 308–9

  as stock figures of fictional romance, 238

  taken under wing by Prince of Wales, 82–88

  see also American Aristocrats; Buccaneers; Self-Made Girls; specific topics and heiresses

  American heiresses, married, 183–259

  allowed into husbands’ lives, 200–208

  brought to husbands’ ancestral homes, 183–86, 184, 185

  as châtelaines, 218–31, 247

  country houses redone by, 226–31

  disillusionment of, 240–45

  divorces of, 311–12, 315–16

  and domestic importance of English husbands, 199–200

  dominance established by, 220–25

  English country houses found uncomfortable by, 189–90

  English system of childrearing and, 212–17

  extramarital affairs of, 250–59

  good works of, 246–47

  husbands’ former hostesses displaced by, 220–21

  husbands unsolicitous toward, 196

  hygenic concerns of, 227

  ill-prepared for running of households, 197–99

  in-law troubles of, 183, 194–96, 221

  introduced to “the County,” 186–89

  invalidism as option for, 243–45

 

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