Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. www.wikiwand.com › en › Mary_GoeletMary Goelet - Wikiwand

    Mary Goelet was born in 1878. Her parents were Mary Wilson Goelet (1855–1929) and Ogden Goelet (1851–1897), a prominent heir and landlord in New York City and great-grandson of Peter Goelet, heir to one of the largest fortunes of the time. Her only sibling was a younger brother, Robert, who built Glenmere mansion.

  2. Mary (née Goelet), Duchess of Roxburghe; Mary Rita Goelet (née Wilson) by José Maria Mora albumen cabinet card, circa 1878 6 1/2 in. x 4 1/4 in. (165 mm x 107 mm) overall Given by Terence Pepper, 2014 Photographs Collection NPG x197465

  3. His son, John G. Goelet, married Jannetie Cannon, daughter of merchant Jan Cannon. Family tree Beatrice Goelet (daughter of Robert Goelet) by John Singer Sargent, 1890 Mary Goelet, Duchess of Roxburghe, 1903 Robert Goelet with his wife. Peter Goelet Gerry and his wife.

  4. 25 de ene. de 2022 · So they got known the Marrying Wilsons, I love that. But she was wealthy in her own right too. She came from a banking family. So combined it was these two sort of American familial superpowers really that had combined in Ogden Goelet and Mary Wilson to create Mary and her brother Robert as probably two of the most eligible young people in the ...

  5. 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.

  6. The Dowager Duchess of Roxburghe, nee Anne Emily Spencer-Churchill, mother. of the Duke, presented to her daughter-in-law May Goelet, the famous Roxburghe collection of emeralds as wedding gift in 1903. The emeralds were valued at $600,000 at that time. They carry the traditions of 200 years of the Innes-Ker family.

  7. 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.