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  1. 5.8K views, 107 likes, 10 loves, 4 comments, 18 shares, Facebook Watch Videos from Smithsonian Channel: Can you believe it? 勞 In the latest episode of An American Aristocrat’s Guide to Great Estates:...

  2. Lady Mary (May) "May" Innes-Ker formerly Goelet. Born 6 Oct 1878 in New York City, New York County, New York, United States. Ancestors. Daughter of Ogden Goelet and Mary Rita (Wilson) Goelet. Sister of Robert Goelet and Robert Wilson Goelet. Wife of Henry John Innes-Ker KT MVO — married 10 Nov 1903 in New York City. Descendants.

  3. Mary Lewis. On Leave Spring 2024. Mary Lewis is Robert Walton Goelet Professor of French History at Harvard, and Affiliated Faculty at the Harvard Law School . Her work has ranged from questions of immigrant rights in 20th-century France to the nature of French colonial rule in North Africa and the Caribbean since the late 18th century.

  4. 19 de oct. de 2021 · Mary was the daughter of American Real Estate magnate Ogden Goelet and Mary Wilson, the daughter of a prominent banker. Her mother had always had half an eye on Mary marrying into an aristocratic European family, and had ensured her position as a bridesmaid at the wedding of the Duke of Marlborough (himself Henry Roxburghe’s cousin) to American heiress Consuelo Vanderbilt in 1895.

  5. Mary Innes-Ker (born Goelet) was born on month day 1878, in birth place, New York, to Ogden Goelet and Mary Rita “May” Goelet (born Wilson Goelet). Mary had one brother: Robert Wilson Goelet . Mary married Henry John Innes-Ker circa 1903, at age 24 in marriage place , New York.

  6. 1897 July 2, Friday, Mr. Ogden Goelet, Mrs. May Goelet, and Mary Goelet attended the Duchess of Devonshire's fancy-dress ball at Devonshire House. (Ogden Goelet is #502 in the list of people who attended; Mrs. May Goelet is #503; and Miss Mary Goelet is #228.) 1903 November 10, Henry John Innes-Ker and Mary Goelet married.

  7. www.floorscastle.com › visit › castleCastle - Floors Castle

    Following the marriage of the 8th Duke to wealthy American real estate heiress, Mary Goelet, in 1903, the castle underwent another transformation, with its Victorian interiors being lavishly remodelled by the new Lady of the house.