Consuelo and Alva: Love and Power in the 'Gilded Age': Love, Power and Suffrage in the Gilded Age

Consuelo and Alva: Love and Power in the 'Gilded Age': Love, Power and Suffrage in the Gilded Age

by Amanda Mackenzie Stuart (Author)

Synopsis

A fabulously wealthy New York beauty marries a cold-hearted British aristocrat at the behest of her Machiavellian mother - then leaves him to become a prominent Suffragette. On November 6th,1895, crowds of curious sightseers gathered outside the Church of St Thomas on Fifth Avenue in New York.Those who had arrived early enough to peep inside the church saw that it had been decorated with thousands of white flowers at eye-watering expense. Even a casual reader of local newspapers would have known that the small, dapper bridegroom with his best man was a great English aristocrat. An audible shiver of schadenfreude went through the crowd at the arrival of the bride. She was twenty minutes late and anyone who caught a glimpse beneath her veil could see that her face was swollen with crying. On the day Consuelo's grandfather died he was the richest man in America; the Vanderbilt fortune stood at USD200 million. Her father, Willie K, started to spend it, being the first generation of 'social Vanderbilts'. In this he was enthusiastically assisted by Consuelo's mother, a force of nature called Alva Erskine Smith, who was determined to take the family to the top of New York society. And like many other American plutocrats, a chronically underfunded English aristocrat was just the thing. It didn't matter that Consuelo loved someone else; as Alva once told her, 'I don't ask you to think, I do the thinking, you do as you are told.' But like many a woman before and since who has been coerced into marriage (paradoxically, her mother had divorced her father by the time Consuelo herself was making what many termed 'the match of the century'), Consuelo threw herself into children and good works; Winston Churchill encouraged her to make her first public speech, and increasingly an interest in social and political matters became a way of dealing with loneliness, and this in turn added to the tension between the Marlboroughs. Sunny, the ninth Duke, with his own loveless childhood, was unable to provide kindness or understanding to his increasingly socially aware wife, who made no secret of the fact that she resented and frequently despised him.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 592
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 15 Aug 2005

ISBN 10: 0007127308
ISBN 13: 9780007127306

Media Reviews
'A dual life story that reads as pleasurably as the best fiction but with all the intelligence of a first-rate biography!completely absorbing.' Amanda Foreman / Amanda Mackenzie Stuart is a highly promotable, well-connected author. / Will appeal to Edith Wharton fans (the story of the Vanderbilt children inspired her book The Buccaneers); also those who enjoyed Diana Souhami's Mrs Keppel and Her Daughter. / / Massive review and feature coverage.
Author Bio
Amanda Mackenzie Stuart has worked in British film since the 1980s, having taken a first-class degree in history at Oxford. Her last film was Room to Rent, which was distributed in the UK in 2000. She has been writing about history for Renegade films, and a stage play for singer Morag MacLaren about the life of lyricist Dorothy Fields. This is her first book.