Dollar princess explained

Dollar princesses (sometimes known as "dollar duchesses") were wealthy American women of the late 19th and early 20th centuries who married into titled European families, exchanging wealth for prestige. They were often the daughters of nouveau riche industrialists whose families wanted to gain social standing. The term was also used occasionally in the Danish press for any woman of means marrying into a titled family.[1]

According to a book called Titled Americans (1915), there were 454 marriages between Gilded Age and Progressive Era American women and European aristocrats.[2] The Library of Congress claimed in a reference guide that "American heiresses married more than a third of the House of Lords". The Spectator claims that among the marriages were 102 "British aristocrats", including "six dukes".[3]

Women called dollar princesses

In fiction

The phrase seems to appear frequently as a trope of fiction, such as in Georgina Norway's Tregarthen (1896):[11]

A 1920 book review described a new novel as "plot simplicity itself, being concerned essentially with the struggle of two wealthy girls, a vulgar American 'Dollar Princess' and a charming Lancashire lass, for the love of a young farmer baronet who cleaves, like his forefathers, to the old religion."[12]

The Buccaneers, a 1938 novel by Edith Wharton, is set in this milieu.

Cora Crawley (née Levinson), the Countess of Julian Fellowes' Downton Abbey, is written as a wealthy American heiress who married the Earl of Grantham, and whose dowry helped save Downton from financial ruin.

A 2023 Library Journal review of a title in the "Gilded Age Heiresses" romance-novel series describes a plot scenario wherein "American 'Dollar Princess' Camille, now the Dowager Duchess of Hereford after her horrible husband's death, decides to ask Jacob Thorne, co-owner of an infamous club and the illegitimate son of an earl, for help discovering if she can find pleasure with a man."[13]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Hiort . Ivar . 1 October 1910 . Yore Landsmænd i Udlandet: Louis Frölich . Masken . 1 . 1 . 169 . Internet Archive.
  2. Web site: Saelee . Mike . Research Guides: Dollar Princesses: Topics in Chronicling America: Introduction . 2023-04-12 . guides.loc.gov . en.
  3. Web site: Shakespeare . Nicholas . 2017-06-08 . Gilded prostitution . 2023-04-12 . The Spectator . en-US.
  4. Book: Shields, Pamela . Hertfordshire Secrets & Spies . 2009-10-15 . Amberley Publishing Limited . 978-1-4456-2872-1 . en.
  5. Web site: 2023-09-12 . How American 'Dollar Princesses' Invaded British High Society . 2023-09-14 . HISTORY . en.
  6. Henderson . Amy . "Downton Abbey" and the Dollar Princesses . 2023-04-12 . Smithsonian Magazine . en.
  7. Web site: ADAF — Individual Lectures: Dressed in Diamonds: American Princesses and Gilded Age Fashion Kevin L. Jones, Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising Museum . 2023-04-12 . adafca.org.
  8. Web site: New Castle Herald 20 Dec 1922, page Page 1 . 2023-04-12 . Newspapers.com . en.
  9. 1888 . THE AMERICAN DOLLAR PRINCESS IN GREECE . Current Opinion . 78 v.
  10. Web site: The Bristol Herald Courier 03 Sep 1928, page 7 . 2023-04-12 . Newspapers.com . en.
  11. Book: Norway, G. . Tregarthen . 1896 . Hurst and Blackett . London.
  12. 1920 . Yorkshire and Lancashire in recent fiction. The Bookman . 87 v.
  13. Review: The Duchess Takes a Husband. By: Kobiela-Mondor, Jenny. Library Journal.  Mar2023, Vol. 148 Issue 3, p132-132. 1/6p.,