Date
5-23-2025
Department
College of Arts and Sciences
Degree
Master of Arts in History - Thesis (MA)
Chair
Logan Earl Thomas
Keywords
Dollar princesses, Gilded Age, aristocracy, Consuelo Vanderbilt, Jennie Jerome Churchill, Mary Stevens Paget, Anna Gould, Nancy Astor, Mary Leiter Curzon, May Goelet, Margaretta Drexel, Anglo-America, stereotypes, wealth, noble titles, robber barons, America, United States, Britain, Europe
Disciplines
History
Recommended Citation
Talley, Makayla Elise, "Glitter, Gold, and Glory: The Social, Economic, and Political Legacy of the Dollar Princesses in Gilded Age Anglo-America" (2025). Masters Theses. 1302.
https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/masters/1302
Abstract
In the late nineteenth century, America and Europe were experiencing drastically different financial situations. While the British aristocracy struggled to maintain their estates and lavish lifestyle due to the repeal of the Corn Laws and agricultural decline, America’s newly self-made men celebrated the expansion of the American frontier, dominating industries and amassing huge fortunes. As a result, the dollar princesses emerged—wealthy American heiresses who married European nobility, stereotypically “trading” money for an aristocratic title and prestige. Many of these transatlantic marriages, however, were actually a result of love or parental/societal force. Through an analysis of the reasons behind the dollar princess phenomenon, a couple of specific dollar princesses/their marriages, and the dollar princesses’ public actions, this thesis is significant to the History discipline because it demonstrates the importance of these women in history and explains how vital transatlantic marriages were to Anglo-American culture and politics at the turn of the twentieth century.