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The Grandes Dames

Page 34

by Stephen Birmingham


  grandes dames as custodians of, 10–11, 67, 280–81

  guilt feelings associated with, 211, 212

  IRS stipulations on, 280

  matriarchal domination in, 59

  New American Masters in, 74–75

  patriotism in, 74, 211

  prices paid for, 86, 211, 240–41

  Ascoli, Marion Rosenwald, see Rosenwald, Marion

  Ascoli, Max, 111

  Astor, Brooke, 282

  Astor, Caroline:

  dinner parties given by, 17–19, 127

  in New York Society, 17, 49, 213, 223, 227

  operas attended by, 18, 27, 243

  personality of, 17

  social decline of, 19–20, 244

  Astor, Vincent, 282

  Atlantic Monthly, 79, 91

  August Belmont & Company, 224

  Austerity Castle, 116–17

  Austin Statesman, 187

  Bacon, Mrs. Robert Low, 282

  Bakhmeteff, George, 236

  Baltzell, E. Digby, 24, 25

  Barbizon School, 68, 212

  Bar Harbor, Maine, 42, 43, 48

  Barnard College, 159

  Baron de Hirsch Fund, 201

  Barrie, James M., 229

  Barrymore, John, 230

  Barrymore, Lionel, 230

  Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, 71

  Baume, Germaine de, 50

  Bayou Bend, 268–69, 276–77

  Beatles, 275

  Beaux, Cecilia, 75

  Beebe, Lucius, 267

  Belmont, August:

  art collected by, 226

  background of, 223–25

  children of, 231

  Christianization of, 225–26

  death of, 226

  as Jewish, 224, 247

  marriage of, 225–26

  in New York society, 226–27

  race track built by, 226

  Belmont, August, Jr.:

  background of, 231

  death of, 247

  first marriage of, 231

  race horses owned by, 237–38

  second marriage of, 231–32, 233, 234

  Belmont, Caroline Slidell Perry:

  background of, 226

  children of, 231

  marriage of, 225–26, 236

  in New York society, 227

  Belmont, Eleanor Robson:

  as actress, 92–93, 228–29, 230, 232, 281

  appearance of, 247–48

  art collected by, 241

  background of, 227–28

  death of, 254

  entertaining by, 235

  honors received by, 253–54

  mansions of, 233–34, 253

  marriage of, 231–32, 233, 234

  as opera patroness, 241, 242, 247, 248–50, 251–52, 254, 266

  philanthropy of, 238, 239–40, 241, 252–53, 280

  as racing enthusiast, 236–38

  Shaw’s relations with, 229–30, 241

  as society hostess, 235–36

  Belmont, Fredericka Elsaas, 225

  Belmont, Oliver Hazard Perry, 231

  Belmont, Perry, 231

  Belmont, Simon, 225

  Belmont mansion, 234, 253

  Belmont Park Race Track, 226

  Berenson, Bernard:

  background of, 78–79, 218

  classic work by, 220

  Duveen’s relations with, 214–15, 217–19

  Gardner’s relations with, 83–84, 86, 91, 215

  as Italian Renaissance art expert, 83, 166, 215–16, 220, 241

  memoirs of, 219

  Berenson, Mrs. Bernard, 218

  Biddle, Mrs. Alexander, 48

  Biddle, Edward, 25

  Biddle, Emily Drexel, 25

  Bigelow, Henry J., 61

  Big Four, The (Lewis), 198–99

  Billy Rose Sculpture Garden, 120

  Birley, Oswald, 209

  blacks, Rosenwalds and, 103, 105, 110, 111

  Blashfield, Edwin H., 199

  Blue Boy, The (Gainsborough), 207, 211, 216

  Bockius, Morris, 44

  Bohemians, opera and, 244

  Borgia, Lucrezia, 15

  Boston Assemblies, 64

  Boston Brahmins, 281

  Boston Opera House, 59

  Boston society:

  arts viewed by, 67, 68

  as “conventionally independent,” 56

  Germans in, 64

  intellectual life in, 55

  liberalism of, 55

  old families in, 60

  Philadelphia society vs., 55

  ritual visiting in, 63

  Sewing Circle in, 63–64

  wealth in, 55, 60

  Boston Transcript, 260

  Botticelli, Sandro, 84, 217

  Broadnax, Lucius, 269, 270

  Brooklyn Museum, 195

  Browning, Robert, 230

  Bunche, Ralph, 103

  Bunker, Denis, 77, 78

  Burnett, Frances Hodgson, 232

  Burt, Nathaniel, 37, 41

  By-the-Sea, 234, 253

  Calder, Alexander, 120

  Callas, Maria, 131

  Cameron, Evelyn, 227, 228

  Carew Tower, 158

  Carmody, Deirdre, 254

  Carnegie Museum, 104

  Carter, Boake, 43

  Carter, Morris, 86

  Cartier, Pierre, 41, 128, 220

  Caruso, Enrico, 245

  Casals, Pablo, 91

  Cassatt, Alexander, 42

  Cassatt, Mary, 75

  Central Pacific Railroad, 185, 205

  chandeliering, 64

  Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, 192

  Chicago:

  Charity Ball in, 127

  crime in, 102–3, 126

  music in, 130–31, 132–33

  psychoanalysis in, 144–45

  public morality in, 132–33

  society life in, 126–28

  Chicago Institute of Art, 127

  Chicago Opera Company, 128, 130–131, 132–33, 134, 137, 138, 139, 144

  Chicago Tribune, 103, 150

  Chicago with Love (Meeker), 148

  Child Guidance Center of Houston, 274–75

  Children of the Ghetto (Zangwill), 228

  Children of the King (Crawford), 71

  Cincinnati:

  early years of, 155–56

  ethnic composition of, 159

  as Losantiville, 155

  old families in, 156

  philanthropy in, 163–65, 166

  prosperity of, 156–57

  Cincinnati Art Museum, 168, 179

  Cincinnati Enquirer, 173, 174–78, 179–180

  Civil War, U.S., 164, 190, 226

  Cleveland, Grover, 16

  Clews, Elsie, 235

  Clifton, Chalmers, 166, 179n

  coal mining, 39

  Cochran, Alexander Smith, 138–40

  Colby, Olive, 149

  Colton mansion, 199

  Congress, U.S., 185

  Connally, John, 276

  Connally, Nellie, 278

  Conried, Heinrich, 245

  Cook, Augustus, 227

  Cook, Madge Carr, 227, 228

  Coolidge, Calvin, 116

  Cotton Exchange, 106, 117

  Crawford, Frank Marion:

  background of, 69–70

  escape of, 73, 75–76

  Gardner’s relations with, 70, 71–74, 77, 81, 91

  as novelist, 71–72, 75

  Crocker, Charles, 185, 186

  Cromwell, Charles Thorn, 16

  Cromwell, Doris Duke, 45, 50

  Cromwell, James Henry Roberts, 233

  background of, 38–39

  on Eva Stotesbury, 42–43, 45, 47–48, 49–51, 279

  first marriage of, 40–41, 45, 50

  as New Dealer, 45–46

  on Philadelphia society, 49

  poverty viewed by, 39

  Cromwell, Louise, 20, 21, 50

  Cromwell, Oliver, 17

  Cromwell, Oli
ver, Jr., 50

  Cromwell, Oliver Eaton, 16, 17, 20, 21

  Custom of the Country, The (Wharton), 74

  Daisy Miller (James), 68

  Damrosch, Walter, 140

  dances, customs at, 64

  Daniel Frawley Stock Company, 227–228

  Dato, Edward, 147, 148

  Davison, Henry P., 240

  Dawn of Tomorrow, The (Burnett), 232

  Dedmon, Emmett, 133

  d’Engor, Arcadie, 138

  Depression of 1929, 43, 44, 148, 179, 246–47

  Devereux, Mrs. Arthur, 173–74

  Devereux, Marion, 173, 174–78, 179–180, 195

  Dickens, Charles, 160

  Dillard University, 111, 112

  Dillingham, Barbara, 257, 275

  Dillman, Hugh, 45

  Djordjadze, Dmitri, 177

  Dodge, Anna, 40, 41, 45, 48, 220

  Dodge, Delphine, 40, 45

  Dodge, Geraldine Rockefeller, 133–34

  Dodge, Horace, 40–41, 45, 212, 233

  Dodge, Marcellus Huntley, 125

  Dodge Corporation, 45

  Douglas, Alfred, 132

  Dr. Claudius (Crawford), 71

  Drexel, Anthony J., 22, 25

  Drexel and Company, 22, 45

  Duke, Doris, 45, 50

  Duke, James Buchanan, 45

  Duke, Nanaline Inman, 45

  du Maurier, Gerald, 230

  Dürer, Albrecht, 214

  Duveen, Elsie, 213

  Duveen, James Henry, 193

  Duveen, Joel Joseph, 215

  Duveen, Joseph:

  in art-dealer rivalry, 241

  background of, 218

  Berenson’s relations with, 214–15, 217–19

  collecting eminence of, 220

  Huntington’s relations with, 199–200, 201, 206, 207, 208, 211, 213, 214, 216–17, 220

  in lawsuits, 214–15

  Stotesbury’s relations with, 33–34, 36, 38, 42, 47, 84, 86, 167–68, 220

  tactics of, 212–13

  Edgar B. Stern Family Fund, 117–19

  Edgecliffe, 159–60

  education:

  for blacks, 103, 105

  English model for, 59

  for preschoolers, 127

  private philanthropy for, 238

  as progressive, 109

  for women, 159, 171

  Eiffel Tower, 196

  Eldridge, William, 23

  Eliot, T. S., 78

  Ellis, A. Caswell, 273

  El Mirasol, 41–42, 48, 51

  Emergency Unemployment Relief Committee, 241, 252

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 91

  Emery, Albert, 161

  Emery, Audrey, 177

  Emery, John Josiah, 156, 157–58, 177

  Emery, Julia, 157

  Emery, Kezia, 157

  Emery, Mary:

  art collected by, 161, 167–68, 179, 215

  background of, 158–59

  children of, 161–62

  city planning by, 171–73, 178–79, 180–81

  death of, 178–79

  Devereux’s relations with, 177–78

  Livingood’s relations with, 161–62, 166–67, 168, 169, 179

  mansions built by, 159–61

  marriage of, 158, 159

  personality of, 159, 161

  philanthropy of, 162, 163–66, 167, 168, 169, 170–73, 178–79, 280

  young protégés of, 166

  Emery, Sheldon, 161

  Emery, Thomas, 156, 157

  Emery, Thomas Josephus, Jr.:

  background of, 156

  business affairs of, 157–58

  death of, 162

  marriage of, 158, 159

  Memorial Fund for, 163–64, 179, 180, 181

  Emery Auditorium, 164–65

  Emery Candle Company, 157, 158

  Emmet, Alida Chanler, 282

  England, 59, 253

  Erté, 149

  Evans, Cerinda W., 188–90

  Fabric of Memory, The (Belmont), 232

  Fabulous Chicago (Dedmon), 133

  Farrar, John, 252

  Farwell, Arthur, 132

  Fate of Marvin, The (Hogg), 258

  feminism, 127, 171, 193, 281, 282

  Fenway Court, see Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

  Field, Marshall, 100

  Filson, John, 155

  Finletter, Thomas K., 236

  Finn, Mickey, 126

  Fish, Mrs. Stuyvesant, 235, 236

  Fisher, Dorothy Canfield, 179

  Flagstad, Kirsten, 250–51

  Fleischman, Gladys, 112n

  Fleming, John F., 208

  Ford, Henry, 101, 212, 280

  Ford Foundation, 280

  Four Hundred, origin of, 17–18

  Fraenkel, Joseph, 138

  Franks, Bobby, 112n

  Franz Ferdinand, Archduke, 263

  Franz Josef, Emperor, 263

  Frawley, Daniel, 228–29

  Freud, Sigmund, 136–37

  Frick, Henry, 211, 212, 215

  Frick Museum, 104

  Fuller, Melville W., 16

  furniture, American, 261–62

  Gambetta, Léon, 76

  Gamble, James, 157

  Garden, Mary, 131, 132–33, 137

  Garden Clubs of America, 112

  Gardner, Isabella Stewart, 227

  appearance of, 56–57, 61

  art museum built by, see Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

  as art patroness, 66–68, 76–77, 83–85

  background of, 56–58, 59

  Berenson’s relations with, 83–84, 86, 91, 215

  in Boston society, 63–64, 69, 74, 77–78

  Crawford’s relations with, 69–70, 71–74, 75–76, 77, 81, 91

  at dances, 64–65

  in Europe, 58, 59, 61, 66, 82

  illnesses of, 63, 64, 65, 66, 76, 85

  inheritances of, 82, 85

  James’s relations with, 68–69

  marriage of, 62, 69, 76, 83

  nervous breakdowns of, 66, 76, 85

  salon founded by, 67–68, 69

  Sargent’s portraits of, 80–81, 91

  Sargent’s relations with, 77, 79

  sexual life of, 72–73

  son born to, 65–66

  unconventional behavior of, 55, 61–62, 77–78, 82–83

  Whistler’s portrait of, 67–68

  youthful protégés of, 78, 166

  Zorn’s portrait of, 90

  Gardner, John Lowell, 58, 65

  Gardner, John Lowell, Jr.:

  background of, 60–61

  in Boston society, 69, 74

  business affairs of, 60, 82

  child born to, 65

  Crawford’s relations with, 72, 73–74

  death of, 85

  in Europe, 66, 82

  marriage of, 62, 69, 76, 83

  portrait withdrawn by, 81

  Gardner, John Lowell, III, 65

  Gardner, Joseph, 60

  Gardner, Julia, 58, 60

  Gatti-Casazza, Giulio, 245, 246, 251

  Gautreau, Madame, 76

  General Motors Corporation, 118

  Gereuth, Maurice de Hirsch de, 201

  Germans, Boston, 64

  Giorgione, Il, 218

  Gizycka, Felicia, 127

  Gizycki, Count Josef, 127

  golf, 234

  Gould, Jay, 223

  grandes dames:

  as art custodians, 10–11, 67, 280–81

  as displaced by corporations, 280

  essential qualities of, 9–11, 15, 281

  feminism and, 281, 282

  government’s discouragement of, 280

  new vs. old types of, 282–83

  philanthropy of, 11

  Proud Possessors vs., 10–11

  selection of, 11

  sexist view of, 257

  as tough, 9, 15, 281

  as “vanishing breed,” 279–83

  Grant, Frederick Dent, 127

  G
rant, Ulysses S., 127

  Gréber, Jacques, 36

  Greeley, Horace, 224–25

  Green, Marion, 166

  Grey, Edward, 263

  Guest, Edgar, 99

  Guest, Joseph, 167, 168

  Guggenheim Foundation, 280

  Hackett, Charles, 166

  Hammerslough family, 101

  Hammerstein, Oscar, I, 246

  Happy Profession, The (Sedgwick), 79–80

  Harlow, Alvin, 180

  Harriman, E. H., 20, 203, 223

  Harriman, Mary, 238–39, 240

  Harris, Leon, 120

  Harrison, Benjamin, 231

  Harte, Bret, 230

  Havemeyer, Frederick C., 197

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 196

  Henderson, Isaac, 194

  Henderson, Nathalie, 239

  Hepworth, Barbara, 120

  Hess, Tom, 113

  Heyneman, Julie Helen, 77

  Histoire Héliodore, 129

  Hogg, Ima:

  appearance of, 259–60, 267

  art collected by, 262–63

  background of, 258–59, 260–61, 281

  buildings restored by, 275–76

  as clairvoyant, 265, 272

  death of, 277–78

  education of, 260–61, 262

  egalitarianism of, 267

  entertaining by, 269–70

  as horse enthusiast, 263–64

  interests of, 261–62, 265, 272–73, 275–76

  mansion built by, 268–69

  in mental-health work, 273–75

  naming of, 257–59

  oil wealth of, 265

  personality of, 257–58, 270–71

  as spinster, 259

  Symphony Society founded by, 266–67

  WPA supported by, 270–71

  Hogg, James Stephen, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 265, 266, 273

  Hogg, Mike, 258, 259, 261, 266, 268

  Hogg, Sallie Stinson, 258, 259

  Hogg, Thomas Elisha, 258

  Hogg, Tom, 258, 259, 261, 266n

  Hogg, Will, 258, 259, 261, 266, 268, 273, 274

  Hogg Foundation, 273–75

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 281

  Homans, Abigail Adams, 55–56

  Homestead, The, 197

  Honeymoon Cottage, 275

  Hopkins, Mark, 185, 186

  Hopkins, Mary, see Emery, Mary

  Hopkins, Richard H., 159

  horse racing, 237–38

  Hotchkiss, Maria, 212

  Hôtel de Hirsch, 201, 202

  Hotel Emery, 157, 158

  Houdini, Harry, 235

  Houston, 262, 266

  Houston Museum of Fine Arts, 263, 276–77

  Houston Post, 272

  Houston Symphony Society, 266–67

  Howe, Julia Ward, 69

  Howe, Maud, 73, 75

  Hubbard, Elisha Dyer, 146

  Hundred Year Association, 254

  Hunt, Myron, 206

  Hunt, Richard Morris, 197–98

  Huntington, Arabella Duval Yarrington Worsham:

  appearance of, 187–88, 196, 209

  art collected by, 199–200, 201, 207, 208, 210, 211, 216

  background of, 187–90, 191–92, 281

  Birley’s portrait of, 208–9

  Collis Huntington’s marriage to, 196–97

  Collis Huntington’s premarital relations with, 188, 192–93, 195–196

  death of, 209

 

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