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Astor. Rockefeller. McCormick. Belmont. All family names that still
adorn buildings, streets and charity foundations. While the men
blazed across America with their oil, industry, and railways, the
matriarchs founded art museums, opera houses, and symphony houses
that functioned almost as private clubs. These women ruled American
society with a style and impact that make today's socialites seem
pale reflections of their forbears. Linked by money, marriage,
privilege, power and class, they formed a grand American matriarchy
that dominated the social and cultural life of the nation between
the 1870s and the Second World War. The Grandes Dames of America
knew just what they wanted and precisely how to get it, and when
faced with criticism, malice or jealousy, they would rise above
their detractors and usually persevere. Preeminent social historian
Stephen Birmingham takes us into the drawing rooms of these
powerful women, providing keen insights into aspects of an American
Society that no longer exists. Caroline Astor, when asked for her
fare boarding a street car, responded, "No thank you, I have my own
favorite charities." Edith "Effie" Stern decided that no existing
school would do for her child, so she had a new one built. And the
legendary Isabella Stewart Gardner replied to a contemporary who
was overly taken with their Mayflower ancestors: "Of course,
immigration laws are much more strict nowadays." These women had
looks, manner, and style, but more than that they had
presence-there was a sense that when one of them entered a room,
something momentous was about to occur. Birmingham opens a window
to the highest levels of American society with these eight profiles
of American "royalty".
Tracing their origins to medieval Portugal and Spain, the Sephardic
Jews consider themselves 'the nobility of Jewry,' in contrast to
their pushier and more aggressive German counterparts. They were
also the first Jews to inhabit the new world-first exiled from
Spain and Portugal, and then forced out of Brazil, a ship bearing
23 Sephardic Jews was blown off its course to Holland, beset by
pirates, and then captured by a French captain before being
ransomed for the 'payment of their freight' in the City of New
Amsterdam. And so the American Sephardic Jewish story begins. Here
Stephen Birmingham tells the rich and varied history of this
insular group of bewilderingly interrelated families, spiced with
gossip and the gentle rattling of family skeletons. We find tales
of fortunes made in the fur trade long before the Astors,
revolutionary heroes and heroines, and poetic spinster Rebecca
Gratz, thought to be Scott's model for Rebecca in Ivanhoe. Through
it all emerges a picture of a proud haughty people, who have chosen
to remain aloof from the later-arriving Jews from Europe, and have
staunchly refused to be swept up in the movement of Reform Judaism,
preferring to adhere to their Orthodox rituals. Stephen Birmingham
weaves a vibrant tapestry of the Sephardic experience in America,
working in threads of their history in medieval Europe as he
depicts the lives of these extraordinary Americans.
Where are the Right Places, those exclusive locations where the
privileged live and play? You may be in for a surprise. For as
Stephen Birmingham shows, in the same witty, penetrating style that
characterized his other studies of the elite, the Right Places
could be just about anywhere, from exclusive chalets in Sun Valley,
Idaho to the traditionally swank estates of Fairfield County,
Connecticut, to the nascent avant-garde art scene in Kansas City,
Missouri. Birmingham goes to great lengths to unveil the secret
enclaves of the rich for his readers, from the secret hideaway of
Maria Callas after Aristotle Onassis deserted for the lovely
widowed Jacqueline Kennedy, to Elizabeth Taylor's habits at home,
including her favorite recipe for chili. The late Stephen
Birmingham renders the walls between the reader and the rich
transparent, giving us a glimpse into their lives and abodes beyond
what is seen in paparazzi photos.
America's Irish Catholic rich have long enjoyed the designation of
F.I.F., or First Irish Family or "Real Lace", as it delineates
their place in the "Irishtocracy", where names such as Cuddihy,
Murray, Doheny, and McDonnell inspire respect and awe. Yet, in
almost every case, their origins in this country were humble.
Fleeing the Irish potato famine in the 1840s, they found themselves
penniless in the slums of New York and Boston where they were
regarded as "invaders" and a curse, humiliated by signs that said
'No Irish Need Apply' and forced to accept jobs too degrading to be
accepted by native and other immigrant populations. Nonetheless,
they possessed one important advantage over other immigrants: they
spoke the language. They were also, by nature and tradition,
political. And they had ambition, courage, a fighting spirit,
and-perhaps most important-Irish charm. Here, in this engrossing
and often hilarious book, we read of how the Irish elite
emerged-frequently in less than a generation's time-out of poverty
into positions of both social and business prominence. One of the
F.I.F., Robert J. Cuddihy, was behind one of the great publishing
stories of the twentieth century, the rise and fall of the Literary
Digest. Another, Thomas E. Murray, though little schooled,
possessed an engineering genius that led to his control of a number
of electrical and other patents, second only to Thomas Edison.
Still another, Edward Doheny, was a key figure in the great Teapot
Dome scandal of the Harding years. We read of the F.I.F.'s
struggles to cling to their faith, and their determination to cope
with the "Irish curse": alcohol. In Real Lace Stephen Birmingham
recounts the ultimate rags-to-riches story of the American Irish in
a social history as entertaining as it is important.
In this chatty, anecdotal, and often ironic inquiry, Stephen
Birmingham investigates the nesting habits, enjoyments, and
frustrations of American suburban life in the Seventies. He
explores the social organism that is the American suburb-from
Scottsdale Arizona, and Salt Lake City's suburbs, to New York's
Westchester County and the suburbs surrounding the great industrial
cities that fringe the Great Lakes. He has talked with householders
great and small and gleaned their intensely personal views of the
suburban experience: what they like, what they lament, what they
fear. Much of what he records is agreeable gossip-as in his account
of the relationship between the Pocantico Hills Rockefellers and
the Greenwich Rockefellers; some is acute social criticism. Almost
without exception, the suburbanites came to the suburbs with a
dream. The reality they found was often less than what they
envisioned, but occasionally it was more. Most have had to strike a
compromise between the dream and the reality, the swimming pool and
manicured lawn and soaring property tax, good public schools and
out-of-sight school taxes. This compromise in its various
manifestations, and the related problems of status, add a depth of
perspective to a book that oozes the fun and charm of the
Seventies.
Since the Gold Rush, California has represented a land of
opportunity and bounty for a special breed of Americans. Heading
west in pursuit of sunshine, riches, and elusive dreams, the early
mavericks of California set out to make their fortunes--and often
succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. Prospectors became oil
tycoons, squatters became cattle barons, and farmers' wives became
grandes dames of a new rough-hewn society. In California Rich
Stephen Birmingham explores this fascinating social history,
showing how the ruling class of California was born, and how it
evolved a lifestyle that continues to fascinate the world. Its
colorful array of characters include: the despotic William Randolph
Hearst, renowned for treating kings and copyboys with equal
disdain; Governor Leland Stanford , who shamelessly used politics
for the profit of his railroad; and the fiery James Irvine, who
attended business meetings accompanied by an entire pack of hunting
dogs. In exploring how these self-made millionaires acquired their
money-and what they did with it-Birmingham provides a glimpse of
the customs and quirks of California wealth, shedding light on how
the state came to symbolize the easy, opulent life, that still
entices seekers of fame and fortune today.
America has always been a constitutionally classless society, yet
an American aristocracy emerged anyway-a private club whose members
run in the same circles and observe the same unwritten rules.
Renowned social historian Stephen Birmingham reveals the inner
workings of this aristocracy and identifies which families in which
cities have always mattered and how they've defined America.
America's Secret Aristocracy offers an inside look at the estates,
marriages and financial empires of America's most selective club
and a gallery of vivid portrait of its members: the William
Randolphs, the first of the first families of Virginia; the
Carillos and Ortegas, the premier ranchero families of California;
Presidents Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt; the Boston Brahmins,
including the Lowells, "who speak only to Cabots, and the Cabots,
who speak only to God". With countless anecdotes about our nation's
elite, including interviews with their modern-day descendants, this
is a social history both insightful and entertaining. Scores of
social chroniclers have tried to define America's aristocracy with
various Social Registers and Who's Whos. Stephen Birmingham outdoes
these lists as his colorful portraits go far beyond simply naming
names; they capture the true definition, essence and customs of
America's aristocratic families.
It's no secret that the rich are different from the rest of us. But
the rich, as author Stephen Birmingham so insightfully points out,
are also different from the very rich. There's Society, and then
there's Real Society, and it takes multiple generations for
families of the former to become entrenched in the latter. Real
Society is not about the money-or rather, it's not only about the
money-it is about history, breeding, tradition, and most of all,
the name. The Right People is an engrossing and illuminating
journey through the customs and habits of the phenomenally wealthy,
from the San Francisco elite to the upper crust of New York's
Westchester County. It is a marvelously anecdotal, intimately
detailed overview of the lives of the American aristocracy: where
they gather and dine; their games and sports, clubs and parties,
friendships and feuds; their mating, marriage, and divorce
rituals-a potpourri of priceless true stories featuring the Astors,
Goulds, Vanderbilts, Dukes, Biddles, and other lofty names from the
pages of the Social Register.
The last addition to Stephen Birmingham's historical trilogy,
following "Our Crowd" and The Grandees, "The Rest of Us" recounts
the immigration of Eastern European Jews to America in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Birmingham spotlights the
successes of several of these famous immigrants, including Samuel
Goldwyn, Benny (Bugsy) Siegel, Helena Rubinstein, and Irving
Berlin.
They immigrated to America from Germany in the nineteenth century
with names like Loeb, Sachs, Seligman, Lehman, Guggenheim, and
Goldman. From tenements on the Lower East Side to Park Avenue
mansions, this handful of Jewish families turned small businesses
into imposing enterprises and amassed spectacular fortunes. But
despite possessing breathtaking wealth that rivaled the Astors and
Rockefellers, they were barred by the gentile establishment from
the lofty realm of "the 400," a register of New York's most elite,
because of their religion and humble backgrounds. In response, they
created their own elite "100," a privileged society as opulent and
exclusive as the one that had refused them entry. Our Crowd is the
fascinating story of this rarefied society. Based on letters,
documents, diary entries, and intimate personal remembrances of
family lore by members of these most illustrious clans, it is an
engrossing portrait of upper-class Jewish life over two centuries;
a riveting story of the bankers, brokers, financiers,
philanthropists, and business tycoons who started with nothing and
turned their family names into American institutions.
Life at the Dakota is a deliciously entertaining social history
which describes the lives of the rich and trendy who have lived at
the Dakota, a New York apartment house daringly erected in 1884,
"too far up" and on the wrong side of town. In Stephen Birmingham's
witty chronicle, the atmosphere of this elegant edifice is so
powerful that the building itself becomes an unforgettable major
character. From its start the Dakota has attracted a lively mix of
people, from celebrities Leonard Bernstein, Roberta Flack, and John
Lennon, to a ground-floor tenant who kept a stuffed horse in full
armor in the living room, and yet another older tenant who was
spotted wandering naked through the cellar by some workmen,
mistaken for a ghost of the building. While detailing the active
and often contentious life within the building from the nineteenth
century to the present, Mr. Birmingham also brings to life the New
York social scene and that of other fashionable American cities.
Just as the sixty-foot rooms, the elaborate moldings and rococo
ceilings are lushly described, so is the changing atmosphere in
Central Park, the smell and sound of the street below, the
judgments about what was fashionable and what was not throughout
the years. Here is a window into the marvelous world of The Dakota
and through it, the changing view of New York.
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