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America's Secret Aristocracy

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by Birmingham, Stephen;


  Chapter 2: A Royal Wedding

  The Moot: G. Pellew, John Jay, pp. 19–20.

  “It appeared to me that you have more vivacity”: Quoted in L. Hobart, Patriot’s Lady, p. 39.

  Details of Jay-Livingston courtship and wedding: Ibid., p. 34 ff.

  Virginia Gazette: Quoted in J. A. Osborne, Williamsburg in Colonial Times, p. 71.

  “is involved in the horrible sin”: Quoted in C. Brandt, An American Aristocracy, p. 163.

  “That Englishman Dale”: Henry H. Livingston, interview with author.

  Chapter 3: Manor Lords

  Henry H. Livingston quoted: Interview with author.

  Mrs. Peter Van Brugh Livingston catches fire: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, p. 30.

  Kiliaen Van Rensselaer’s purchase: C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 316.

  Nicholas Van Rensselaer poisoned?: Henry H. Livingston, interview with author.

  Chapter 4: Ancient Wealth

  “an active and opulent merchant”: Quoted in R. B. Morris, ed., John Jay, p. 29.

  Vicissitudes of Jay’s childhood and siblings: Ibid., p. 33.

  “Considering the helpless”: Quoted in ibid.

  Dr. Stoope’s school: G. Pellew, John Jay, p. 9.

  College requirements: Ibid., p. 10.

  “Not being of British descent”: Ibid., p. 7.

  Jay on slavery issue: Quoted in L. Hobart, Patriot’s Lady, pp. 162–163.

  Attitude of New York lawyers toward newcomers: Pellew, pp. 14–15.

  College prank anecdote: Ibid., p. 13.

  “eminent in the profession”: Ibid., p. 14.

  “Though vilified”: Ibid., p. 46.

  Spain’s aid to colonists: J. Trager, The People’s Chronology, p. 328.

  Chapter 5: A Gentleman’s War

  William W. Reese quoted: Interview with author.

  Henry H. Livingston quoted: Interview with author.

  The lost needle tale: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, p. 24 ff.

  The Nannie Brown story: Ibid., p. 22 ff.

  Chapter 6: Coronation in New York

  The Jays in Paris: E. Ellet, The Queens of American Society, p. 64 ff.

  Sarah’s letter to Mrs. Robert Morris: Quoted in ibid., p. 60.

  Audience mistakes Sarah for queen: L. Hobart, Patriot’s Lady, p. 125.

  Sarah’s “Dinner and Supper List”: C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 115.

  Sarah’s entertainments and menus: Hobart, p. 171.

  de Moustier: Ibid.

  “Mrs. Jay gives a dinner”: Quoted in Ellet, p. 75.

  Dr. Benjamin Rush: Quoted in L. De Pauw and C. Hunt, Remember the Ladies, p. 12.

  de Chastellux: Quoted in ibid., p. 14.

  Exchange of Sarah’s and John Jay’s letters: G. Pellew, John Jay, p. 279.

  Love letters of the Jays: Ibid., p. 341.

  Horace Walpole: Quoted in J. Trager, The People’s Chronology, p. 344.

  Guillotin: Quoted in ibid., p. 342.

  John Jacob Astor: Quoted in C. Brandt, An American Aristocracy, p. 179.

  George Washington inaugural festivities: J. and A. Durant, Pictorial History of American Presidents, pp. 16–21.

  John Jay on the Cincinnati: Quoted in Hobart, p. 209.

  Chapter 7: The Great Silverware Robbery

  “John, the non-Signer”: Quoted in S. Alsop, Stay of Execution, pp. 89–90.

  Peter Corne anecdote: Ibid., p. 90.

  “an elegant draft dodge”: Ibid., p. 55.

  The Alsop silver story: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, pp. 27–29.

  Mrs. Corinne D.R.A. Cole: Interview with author.

  Chapter 8: From Camping Out with Indians … to Dinner at the Jays’

  Schieffelin family history: Schieffelin-Trevor-Pardee family papers and genealogies, unpublished, courtesy of Mrs. Margaret Trevor

  Pardee, quoted with permission.

  Hannah Lawrence’s diaries: Ibid.

  Hannah’s poem: Ibid.

  Mrs. Murray’s diversionary tactic: Ibid.

  Margaret Pardee quoted: Interview with author.

  Chapter 9: Livingston Versus Livingston

  New York–Massachusetts-Connecticut border disputes: C. Rand, “The Iron, the Charcoal, the Woods,” New Yorker 39 (August 10, 1963): 31.

  The Ancram Screechers: Ibid.

  “dodging the line”: Ibid.

  “worse than northern savages”: Quoted in C. Brandt, An American Aristocracy, p. 81.

  “Our people are hoggish”: Ibid.

  The Indian-down-the-chimney story: As told to author by Henry H. Livingston in interview. (Brandt, p. 61, tells a different version that involves subduing, but not killing, the Indian.)

  The Captain Kidd affair: Brandt, p. 41 ff.

  The naming of Clermont dispute: Ibid., p. 76.

  Chapter 10: Weak Blood

  H. J. Eckenrode: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 293. “the weak strain”: Ibid., p. 298.

  “I am an aristocrat”: Ibid., p. 300.

  John of Roanoke on congressional salaries: Ibid., p. 303.

  “I would not attempt”: Ibid.

  “is a man of splendid abilities”: J. Bartlett, Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, p. 439.

  “The surest way to prevent war”: Ibid.

  “The transmission of estates”: Quoted in Amory, p. 294.

  “a concealed voluptuary”: Quoted in J. and A. Durant, Pictorial History of American Presidents, p. 33.

  Jefferson’s letter to his daughter: Quoted in Amory, p. 294.

  Chapter 11: Morrises and More Morrises

  “As New England”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 318.

  “An aristocrat!”: Ibid.

  Benjamin P. Morris, Jr., quoted: Interview with author.

  Granny Morris and the Promoter: Ibid.

  “Hell’s bells, woman!”: Ibid.

  Chapter 12: Outsiders

  “Big enough for two emperors”: Quoted in J. and A. Durant, Pictorial History of American Presidents, p. 30.

  Mrs. Douglas Cruger–John Van Buren anecdote: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, pp. 47–48.

  Verse written after Mrs. Douglas’s party: Quoted in ibid., p. 118.

  “He dined here last night”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 470.

  “My son can afford it”: Ibid.

  “Really Mr. Astor is dreadful”: Ibid.

  Chapter 13: Endangered Species

  “How New York has fallen off”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 27.

  “These leaders of gayety”: E. Ellet, The Queens of American Society, pp. 456–458.

  “The really excellent”: Ibid., p. 458.

  “We are all accustomed”: Ibid., p. i.

  “Died yesterday”: Quoted in Amory, p. 27.

  “love instead of lectures”: J. Roosevelt, My Parents, p. 11.

  James Roosevelt V funeral and will: Ibid., p. 5.

  Laura Delano’s eccentricities and quote: Ibid., p. 9.

  “It will be too much Fun”: Ibid., p. 15.

  “dragging the whole country”: Ibid., p. 16.

  “Oh, dear me”: Alice Longworth to author; similarly, all the Longworth quotes that follow in this chapter.

  PART TWO: BRAHMINS, KNIGHTS OF THE CHIVALRY, AND CALIFORNIA GRANDEES

  Chapter 14: Knowing One’s Place

  “Philadelphia was the first city”: Mrs. George Brooke Roberts to author.

  “In Boston”: Miss Anna Ingersoll to author.

  “When a Biddle is drunk”: Popular Philadelphia saying.

  “was larger than any others”: Quoted in E. D. Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentlemen, p. 171.

  “He had an English accent” and all subsequent J. Leland quotes: Mr. Leland to author.

  “If a man’s father”: Mrs. St. J. Ravenel, Charleston: The Place and the People, p. 427.

  “To be dropped”: Ibid., p. 428.

  Chapter 15: O Ancestors!
>
  “A group of English immigrants”: C. M. Andrews, The Fathers of New England, p. 19.

  “Almost without exception”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 40.

  “Oh, no. We sent our servants”: Ibid., p. 41.

  “The Mayflower Society”: Ibid., p. 43.

  “Of the background”: L. B. Wright, The First Gentlemen of Virginia, pp. 41–42.

  “There was not a gentleman”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 43.

  “They have to be anonymous”: Quoted in New York Times, March 26, 1985.

  “We don’t have the slightest interest”: Ibid.

  “I don’t know very much about politics”: Ibid.

  “It was a very small dance group”: Ibid.

  “My mother keeps asking”: Ibid.

  Chapter 16: Beer and the Bourgeoisie

  “The competitors were”: Quoted in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, May 15, 1977.

  “What we all had in common”: Ibid.

  “Without a doubt”: Quoted in International Celebrity Register, p. 115.

  “I remember once”: Quoted in St. Louis Post-Dispatch, May 15, 1977.

  “For weeks afterward”: Ibid.

  Chapter 17: O Pioneers!

  “Everyone knows”: Gorham Knowles, interview with author.

  “Each of these families knows”: Quoted in K. Waller and B. P. Cullen, “California’s Land Grant Aristocracy,” Town & Country 139 (December 1985): 139–147, 227–232.

  “Don José de la Guerra’s house”: Ibid.

  Details of life at Rancho Los Dos Pueblos: W. A. Tompkins, Santa Barbara’s Royal Rancho, p. 165 ff.

  “Everybody is broke”: Ibid., p. 182.

  “The government does nothing” and subsequent Bernardo Yorba quotes in this chapter: Interview with author.

  “We families are all mixed”: Waller and Cullen, 142.

  “Oh, about a thousand”: Ibid., 230.

  “If I’m not one, who is?”: Mr. George T. Brady, Jr., interview with author. Similarly, other Brady quotes in this chapter.

  PART THREE: HEIRS APPARENT

  Chapter 18: Secret Society

  “Only recently”: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, p. 32.

  “That, sir”: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 83.

  “He had the instinctive shrinking”: Ibid.

  “The first thing”: Ibid., p. 84.

  “If I have a hundred-thousand-dollar deal”: Anonymous interview with author.

  “Part of the fun”: John Jay Iselin interview with author.

  Chapter 19: Old Guard Versus New

  “I think it’s not only possible”: Mrs. J. K. Van Rensselaer, The Social Ladder, p. 55.

  “Mother told us”: Mrs. Margaret Trevor Pardee, interview with author. Similarly, all other Pardee quotes in this chapter.

  Chapter 20: The Gospel of Wealth

  Mrs. Fish’s landaulet accident: Pardee scrapbooks.

  James Lee’s stand on anti-Semitism and the “Cathedral of Cooperation”: R. E. Hiebert, Courtier to the Crowd, p. 18.

  McCosh influence on Ivy Lee: Ibid., pp. 21–22.

  Carnegie’s gospel of wealth: Quoted in ibid., p. 22.

  Chapter 21: Comme Il Faut

  Description of “Horseback Dinner”: A. S. Crockett, Peacocks on Parade, p. 192.

  Comments on the Bradley-Martin ball: Quoted in C. Amory, Who Killed Society?, p. 520.

  Chapter 22: “To Serve …”

  The Fortune articles: Quoted in L. T. Wertenbaker and M. Basserman, The Hotchkiss School, A Portrait, p. 133.

  “It was the most natural thing”: F. Ashburn, Peabody of Groton: A Portrait, p. 71.

  “Groton School is perfectly incomprehensible”: Quoted in Wertenbaker and Basserman, p. 135.

  “He never seemed to enter”: Ibid.

  “If some Groton boys”: Quoted in T. Morgan, FDR, p. 66.

  “Don’t let Papa worry”: Quoted in ibid.

  Henry Adams: Quoted in ibid., p. 60.

  “In fact I’ve never understood” and other quotes in this paragraph: George Van Santvoord to author.

  The new boys’ rules: G. N. Stone, “What’s Going On Here?,” Hotchkiss School Alumni Magazine (Winter 1983): 9–10.

  “What is it you want to know?”: L. T. Wertenbaker and M. Basserman, The Hotchkiss School, A Portrait, p. 111.

  “I am sure you have all heard”: Van Santvoord quoted from author’s memory.

  Wilmarth S. Lewis quoted: Interview with author.

  Chapter 23: The Bogus Versus the Real

  Details of the Mabel Greer story: D. W. Peck, The Greer Case.

  Chapter 24: Family Curses

  “I happen to be a good Episcopalian”: Mrs. Ijams quoted by Timothy Beard in interview with author.

  “He was my grandfather’s first cousin”: John Jay Iselin, interview with author.

  “very morbidly conscientious”: R. B. Hovey, John Jay Chapman, p. 12.

  “Certainly it is not respectable”: quoted in ibid., p. 21.

  “To play like that”: Ibid., p. 20.

  “The English stage”: Ibid., p. 14.

  “The next thing I remember”: quoted in M.A.D. Howe, John Jay Chapman and His Letters, pp. 59–60.

  “the great alienist”: Ibid.

  “I am perfectly well and happy”: Ibid., pp. 60–61.

  “Being an old agitator”: Quoted in R. B. Hovey, John Jay Chapman, An American Mind, p. 287.

  “sane, though imaginative”: Ibid., p. 159.

  Chapman’s last words: Ibid., p. 347.

  “Now may I have your attention!”: Quoted in R. H. Boyle, At the Top of Their Game, p. 1.

  “You have always said”: Ibid., p. 2.

  “They don’t make any noise”: Ibid., p. 3.

  “You can abolish”: Ibid.

  “Close the blinds”: Ibid., p. 4.

  “Isn’t it remarkable”: Ibid., p. 5.

  “Winty knits”: Ibid.

  The obscure Virginia statute: Ibid., p. 6.

  The New York Post comment: Ibid., p. 7.

  “Who’s loony now?”: Ibid., p. 7.

  Ethel Barrymore quoted: Ibid.

  Chapter 25: The Great Splurge

  Town Topics: Quoted in M. M. Mooney, Evelyn Nesbit and Stanford White, p. 77.

  “I was brought up to be”: Mrs. Virginia Thaw Wanamaker, interview with Scott Areman.

  “We were very privileged characters”: Mr. John Preston, interview with Scott Areman.

  “It was as bad an upbringing”: Mr. Craig K. J. Mitchell, interview with Scott Areman. Similarly, all Mitchell quotes in this chapter.

  “There are certain values”: J. Carter Brown, interview with author.

  President Wriston anecdote: Ibid.

  “That portrait”: Ibid.

  “Not so”: Ibid.

  “I remember driving”: Ibid.

  “There are eight grandchildren”: Ibid.

  “The English system”: Mrs. John Jermain Slocum, interview with author. Similarly, all other Slocum quotes in this chapter.

  “Good morning, Mrs. Mortimer”: Craig Mitchell, interview with Scott Areman.

  Chapter 26: The Family Place

  “The last of the great”: John Jay Iselin, interview with author.

  “My grandmother was”: Ibid.

  “It seems to me”: Mary Livingston Ripley, interview with author.

  “Yes, the Livingstons still take”: John Jay Iselin, interview with author.

  “We don’t like to dine out”: Ibid.

  “The family has always pulled its weight”: Eleanor Iselin Wade, interview with author.

  The Mary-Ripley-at-Newport anecdote: Mrs. Ripley observed by author.

  The Martha Breasted anecdote: Mrs. Breasted, interview with author.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Adams, James Truslow. The Adams Family. Boston: Little, Brown, 1930.

  Alsop, Stewart. Stay of Execution: A Sort of Memoir. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 197
3.

  Amory, Cleveland. Who Killed Society? New York: Harper & Row, 1960.

  Andrews, Charles M. The Fathers of New England. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1919.

  Ashburn, Frank D. Peabody of Groton: A Portrait. New York: Coward-McCann, 1944.

  Baltzell, E. Digby. Philadelphia Gentlemen. Chicago: Free Press of Glencoe, 1958.

  Boyle, Robert H. At the Top of Their Game. Tulsa, Okla: Winchester Press, 1983.

  Brandt, Clare. An American Aristocracy: The Livingstons. New York: Doubleday, 1986.

  Bruce, William Cabell. John Randolph of Roanoke, 1773–1833. 2 vols. New York: Putnam’s, 1923.

  Crockett, Albert Stevens. Peacocks on Parade: A Narrative of a Unique Period in American Social History and Its Most Colorful Figures. New York: Sears, 1931.

  De Pauw, Linda Grant, and Hunt, Conover. Remember the Ladies: Women in America, 1750–1815. New York: Viking Press, 1976.

  Durant, John and Alice. Pictorial History of American Presidents. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1955.

  Ellet, Elizabeth. The Queens of American Society. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates, 1867.

  Hiebert, Ray Eldon. Courtier to the Crowd: The Story of Ivy Lee and the Development of Public Relations. Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1966.

  Hobart, Lois. Patriot’s Lady: The Life of Sarah Livingston Jay. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1960.

  Hovey, Richard B. John Jay Chapman, An American Mind. New York: Columbia University Press, 1959.

  Howe, M. A. DeWolfe. John Jay Chapman and His Letters. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1937.

  International Celebrity Register. New York: Celebrity Register Ltd., 1959.

  Kahn, E. J. III. “The Brahmin Mystique.” Boston Magazine 75 (May 1983): 119–161.

  Lundberg, Ferdinand. America’s 60 Families. New York: Vanguard Press, 1937.

  Mooney, Michael MacDonald. Evelyn Nesbit and Stanford White. New York: William Morrow, 1976.

  Morgan, Ted. FDR. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1985.

  Morris, Richard B., ed. John Jay, The Making of a Revolutionary. New York: Harper & Row, 1975.

 

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