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  1. Fancy dress ensemble, “Electric Light,” worn by Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt at the 1883 Vanderbilt Ball. 1883. Museum of the City of New York. 51.284.3A-H. At exactly 11:30 the ball began with the hobby-horse quadrille, the first of five quadrilles where the young people of society danced down the grand staircase in lavish costumes.

  2. Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt (née Gwynne ; 11 novembre 1845 - 24 avril 1934) est l'épouse de Cornelius Vanderbilt II et est matriarche de la famille Vanderbilt pendant plus de 60 ans . (fr) Alice Claypoole Gwynne (Cincinnati, 26 novembre 1845 – Manhattan, 22 aprile 1934) è stata una filantropa statunitense. (it)

  3. Cornelius Vanderbilt II met his future wife while both were teaching Sunday school at St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church. Her name was Alice Claypoole Gwynne [1845-1934]. She outlived her husband by 35 years. They had several children but not all survived beyond youth or childhood. Their first child, a girl born in 1869 died in 1874 of a ...

  4. 19. Jan. 2021 · This painting by Spanish artist Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta (1841–1920) portrays Alice Claypoole Gwynne Vanderbilt (1845–1934), wife of Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843–1899), who built The Breakers. It was painted while she and her family were on a summer trip to Europe in 1880, when she was thirty-five. Alice appears contented during ...

  5. Alice Claypoole Gwynne was born 26 November 1845 in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States to Abraham Evan Gwynne (1821-1855) and Rachel Moore Flagg (1822-1884) and died 22 April 1934 1 East Sixty-seventh Street, Manhatten, New York, United States of unspecified causes.

  6. David Eli Gwynne 1786-1849 (1820) Alice Ann Claypoole 1798-1822; Abraham Evan Gwynne 1821-1855 (1840) 1enfant Grands parents maternels, oncles et tantes. Henry Collins Flagg 1792-1863 (1811) Martha Bassett Whiting 1792-1875; Rachel Moore Flagg 1822-1884 ...

  7. 23. Nov. 2018 · Completed in 1895, as a summer home for Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843-1899) and his wife Alice Claypoole Gwynne (1845-1934).Located on 13-acres on the cliffs overlooking the ocean, this elaborate Italian Renaissance mansion perhaps more than any other typifies the Gilded Age and is regarded as the grandest of Newport's Cottages.