When Consuelo Vanderbilt's grandfather died, he was the richest man in America. Her father soon started to spend the family fortune, enthusiastically supported by Consuelo's mother, Alva, who was determined to take the family to the top of New York society—forcing a heartbroken Consuelo into a marriage she did not want with the underfunded Duke of Marlborough. But the story of Consuelo and Alva is more than a tale of enterprising social ambition, Gilded Age glamour, and the emptiness of wealth. It is a fascinating account of two extraordinary women who struggled to break free from the world into which they were born—a world of materialistic concerns and shallow elitism in which females were voiceless and powerless—and of their lifelong dedication to noble and dangerous causes and the battle for women's rights.
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Amanda Mackenzie Stuart is the author of Consuelo and Alva Vanderbilt: The Story of a Daughter and a Mother in the Gilded Age. She lives in Oxford, England.
Amanda Mackenzie Stuart tells the stories of Alva and Consuelo in an intertwined narrative, an approach that adds depth to our understanding of both their lives. Mother and daughter strongly influenced each other, although not in ways that either found comfortable. Alva was a strong-minded woman increasingly frustrated by her role as wife of a rich man with little of meaning to do; her time was consumed with planning and attending parties and balls, ordering clothes and wearing them, building and decorating mansions. According to Stuart, she believed that she was giving her daughter a chance to play a more satisfying role as the Duchess of Marlborough. Consuelo resisted the match, but Alva took to her bed until she gave way and agreed to the near-royal wedding that Alva had already trumpeted to the newspapers.
Consuelo's marriage made her miserable -- the duke criticized every initiative she took, and his mother despised her -- but she established herself as a sought-after presence in British high society, in spite of its prejudice against American heiresses. Winston Churchill was a particular friend, as were other luminaries of the time. She speedily produced two male heirs, but she and the duke separated in 1906, 11 years after they married. More liberal than her husband, as Edwardian society began to disintegrate and reform into something more modern, she flourished while the duke languished. Philanthropy gave Consuelo an effective public role, as her mother had hoped in arranging her marriage. After the separation, Consuelo became a conservative feminist, an able organizer and administrator of many projects for the less fortunate and a successful public speaker. And in 1921, Consuelo remarried for love, to Jacques Balsan, a French pioneer of aviation.
Alva also sought love the second time around, divorcing William K. Vanderbilt to marry Oliver Belmont, a wealthy "gentleman of leisure." After Belmont's death, she reemerged into public life as a militant feminist -- far more radical than her daughter but with the same arrogance she had exhibited as a mother and socialite. She played an important role in the National Woman's Party, supporting Alice Paul and the suffragists who chained themselves to the White House fence during World War I. Alva constantly tried to recruit Consuelo for the more militant wing of the suffrage movement, but Consuelo declined to be swayed. Her mother could no longer rule her, although she used Consuelo's fame to her own advantage in planning social events. Readers who are not familiar with the personalities and struggles of the suffrage movements in the United States and England will not learn much here. Stuart's focus is on the two women and not the cause in which both, in quite different ways, were involved.
Stuart has skillfully integrated a great deal of research, including interviews with family members and an extensive bibliography, into her twined biographies, and she gives a rich sense of both women. She is less successful with the other characters. Several of the recurring and important people remain simply names and events, with no life, no color, of their own. But Stuart is excellent at describing the almost monstrous social occasions, such as the Prince of Wales's 1896 visit to Blenheim: "There were over a hundred people in the house while the shooting party lasted. . . . The women spent most of their time dawdling, chatting and changing. . . . The men were rather more active for they had come to shoot. . . . On Tuesday morning the Duke escorted his guests to part of the estate known as High Park where eight guns shot over two thousand rabbits. On Wednesday the party went to North Leigh where eighty beaters were on hand in light brown Holland smocks and red caps to assist with the bagging of over a thousand birds."
With Stuart's precise descriptions of the endless balls and fetes and the gowns and jewels worn by each woman, reading the book at times feels like consuming six courses of pastry. The latter half, when Alva and Consuelo begin to be politically active, is far livelier. Mother and daughter were both activists and snobs (Alva abused her servants, Consuelo was anti-Semitic), do-gooders and clothes-horses, denizens of Vogue and the political papers. Alva certainly deserves to be returned to her place in the history of feminism and the struggle for the vote in the United States, however controversial and uncomfortable her personality made her. But as Stuart ably demonstrates, they both heroically met the challenges faced by talented and energetic women at the turn of the last century.
Reviewed by Marge Piercy
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
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