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Mansions, parties, and fine dining: Vintage photos show how America's wealthiest business tycoons lived it up during the Gilded Age
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文章聚焦美国镀金时代(19世纪末至20世纪初)富豪们的奢华生活方式,探讨了他们如何通过建造豪宅、购买华服、举办奢华派对等方式炫耀财富,以求融入上流社会。文章也揭示了当时的社会不平等现象,以及新贵与旧贵之间的矛盾。通过对豪宅、派对和社交活动的细致描述,展现了那个时代的社会风貌和财富的象征意义。

💰 镀金时代的富豪们通过积累巨额财富来彰显实力,他们主要来自银行家或掌控铁路、石油、钢铁等关键行业的商业巨头。

🏘️ 豪宅是财富的象征,新富们建造了模仿欧洲宫殿的豪宅,如范德比尔特的“小城堡”和斯瓦布的钢铁豪宅,以挑战旧贵族的地位。

👗 奢华消费是常态,富豪们购买华丽的服装,前往欧洲追逐时尚潮流,并举办各种奢华派对,如为狗举办的晚宴和在马背上进行的用餐。

🎭 社交活动是融入上流社会的手段,新富们通过参加歌剧、舞会等社交活动,试图打破旧贵族对社交圈的控制,提升自身地位。

⚖️ 社会不平等是时代底色,尽管财富积累惊人,但社会阶层分化严重,旧贵族试图维护自己的地位,使得社会流动性受限。

Members of New York high society John S. Milburn, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt III, Stuyvesant Fish, James Roosevelt Roosevelt, and Cornelius Vanderbilt III.

The adage goes that money can't buy happiness, but during the Gilded Age, it certainly bought a lot. 

From the end of the Civil War until President Theodore Roosevelt began to impose limitations on America's wealthy tycoons at the turn of the 20th century, a select few grew enormously rich. Often, they were bankers or those who profited off a number of commercial industries, including railways, oil, and steel.

At the same time, the newly rich sought to spend. They wanted to be seen spending more than their rivals, and they wanted to be treated as equals by those with old money.

Here's how the tycoons of the Gilded Age spent their fortunes.

In the years after the Civil War in 1865, a few Americans, including Andrew Carnegie, John Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and JP Morgan, began to make huge sums of money.
Andrew Carnegie (left) next to his wife, Louise, and their guests.

These wealthy figures were bankers or tycoons who controlled oil, railroads, steel, and other key industries.

By 1897, America's 4,000 richest families — making up less than 1% of the country — had as much wealth as 11.6 million other families combined, Time magazine reported.

They didn't just make fortunes — they spent fortunes, too. It was a period of conspicuous spending that Mark Twain dubbed the "Gilded Age."
Mark Twain at a table with his guests celebrating his 70th birthday at the famous New York restaurant Delmonico’s in 1905.

It wasn't called "the golden age" for a reason. "Gilded" meant the glitz and glamour were covering something not as shiny: rampant inequality.

The term was coined by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner with their 1873 satirical novel, "The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today."

One of the defining features of the period was showing off.
A stockbroker surrounded by books, papers, and figurines in his office in 1904.

The rich flaunted their wealth for everyone to see with the goal of one-upping each other.

With the goal of working their way into the upper echelons of society, those with self-made fortunes looked to how European royalty lived.
The interior of one of the Vanderbilt mansions, known as “The Breakers,” in Rhode Island.

Gilded Age mansions, such as silver heiress Theresa "Tessie" Fair Oelrichs' Rosecliff estate and coal tycoon Edward Julius Berwind's mansion known as The Elms, were modeled after French palaces and chateaus.

There was a visible difference between old money families and the newly rich.
Grace Vanderbilt and Alva Vanderbilt and other socialites at a benefit event.

Across the country, especially in New York City, those with old money sought to keep their world to themselves, while the newly rich were busy building themselves extravagant mansions.

Alva and William K. Vanderbilt, who were considered "new money," built a mansion called the "Petit Chateau" in New York City. Other elites thought it garish.
The arches of the great hall in the Vanderbilts’ Petit Chateau in 1925.

The mansion was made of white limestone — whereas brownstone was in fashion at the time — and occupied close to a block of Fifth Avenue.

It cost $3 million to build in 1882, the equivalent of around $98 million today, and was demolished in 1926, Vogue reported.

In HBO's "The Gilded Age," the central "new money" family, the Russells, are based on the Vanderbilt family.

Cornelius Vanderbilt II and his wife, Alice, built an even more ostentatious mansion on 57th Street in New York for about $3.375 million, the equivalent of more than $110 million today.
An exterior shot of the home of Cornelius Vanderbilt at 57th Street and Fifth Avenue in 1927.

The Vanderbilts' mansion, made of red brick and limestone, was nicknamed the "Buckingham Palace of Fifth Avenue."

The mansion originally had about 50 rooms, but the couple bought neighboring townhouses, tore them down, and expanded the mansion until it had about 91 rooms, The Wall Street Journal reported.

It was later replaced by the Bergdorf Goodman department store.

Not too far away on 73rd Street, steel tycoon Charles M. Schwab built himself a mansion made of steel, limestone, and granite.
An exterior shot of Charles Schwab’s mansion in 1907.

The mansion had 75 rooms, a bowling alley, a swimming pool, and three elevators.

Perhaps most impressively, Schwab had an organ concealed by a tapestry that was woven by 100 Flemish women who had come to the US for that sole purpose, The Wall Street Journal reported.

It was demolished in 1948 and replaced with an apartment building.

But the mansions weren't restricted to New York City. In 1878, railroad mogul John Work Garrett bought his son Harrison and his family another famous mansion with 48 rooms in Baltimore.
Inside the Garrett family’s home theater in Baltimore in 1923.

The Garrett family displayed items and antiques they acquired on their worldwide travels, including German porcelain, Tiffany glass, and Japanese inro, The Washington Post reported.

Their library contained 8,000 volumes, including original books by Audubon and Shakespeare.
Books lined the shelves of the Garrett family’s library in Baltimore in 1923.

It also had a chandelier and a table with candelabras.

Building and buying mansions was only one way the newly wealthy would spend money in the Gilded Age. Shopping for clothes was another.
The wives of WK Vanderbilt and Cornelius Vanderbilt strolling in New York City during the early 1890s.

Every year, socialites would go to Europe to keep up with the latest fashions. The women shopped in Paris, while the men shopped in London.

They also hosted over-the-top parties.
Miss Lola Robinson and Mamie Fish, the wife of Stuyvesant Fish, taking a stroll.

Socialite Marion "Mamie" Graves Anthon Fish, who was married to American railroad tycoon Stuyvesant Fish, hosted a dinner party for her dog where she dressed him up in a $15,000 diamond collar, PBS reported.

Millionaire CKG Billings loved horses so much that his dinner party was held on horseback inside a fancy New York restaurant called Sherry's.
Dozens of guests enjoyed a meal sitting on their horses in a New York restaurant in 1903.

Dinner trays were attached to the saddles, and Champagne was enjoyed through straws from bottles housed in saddlebags, The New York Times reported.

However, most dining took place in proper seats in the wealthy's dining rooms or at high-end restaurants like Delmonico's.
A dinner of society people at Delmonico’s in 1899.

Delmonico's is still in business in New York City — it has been since 1837, according to the restaurant's website.

During this era, there was one diner who was famed for how much he could eat.
A portrait of American financier James Buchanan Brady, also known as Diamond Jim Brady.

Diamond Jim Brady, who made his millions selling railroad supplies, reportedly started his day with pancakes, steaks, chops, eggs, muffins, grits, bread, fried potatoes, and orange juice.

Brady would have morning tea, afternoon tea, six or seven servings of dinner, and dessert, but there were varying accounts about how much he really ate.

In 2008, The New York Times found reports stating that doctors had said his stomach had become six times larger than normal. 

One of the best-known socialites was Caroline Astor, whose famous "List of 400" consisted of guests from 25 socially acceptable families.
A portrait of socialite Caroline Aster from 1903.

The list, which was co-authored with tastemaker Ward McAllister, also featured the exact number of people she could fit in her ballroom, Vogue reported.

Astor hosted parties in her ballroom, which was topped with a dome made of stained glass. Its walls were hung with about 100 paintings. 

Like the era itself, Astor was later revealed to be less wealthy than people thought.
An exterior shot of the mansion where Caroline Astor lived in 1912.

After she died, her goods were auctioned off and people discovered her dinnerware was gold-plated, not solid gold, Town and Country reported.

Society gatekeepers like Astor made social mobility difficult for the newly rich.
Alva Vanderbilt at her masked ball in 1883.

In 1883, Alva Vanderbilt, daughter-in-law of Cornelius Vanderbilt, threw a masked ball which cost about $250,000, or about $8 million today.

She invited 1,200 guests, but purposefully didn't invite Caroline Astor's daughter unless she came with her mother, according to the Museum of the City of New York.

Caroline Astor did attend as she'd hoped, strengthening Alva Vanderbilt's place in society.

The ball was a huge success. Dinner wasn't served until 2 a.m. and the dancing continued until dawn.

The newly rich displayed their fortunes by attending the opera, access to which was controlled by old-money families.
An exterior shot of the Metropolitan Opera House in 1865.

In New York, a group with inherited wealth controlled who could get tickets to the Academy of Music, an opera house, and made it impossible for others to see a show.

In 1883, a group of newly rich families banded together to open the Metropolitan Opera so they could see opera performed, as well.

Gilded Age tycoons did some good with their fortunes, funding museums, orchestras, and opera groups.
Andrew Carnegie and his wife photographed in a car in the early 20th century.

Industrialist Andrew Carnegie, who donated money to fund more than 2,500 libraries around the world, said if a rich man died rich, he "died disgraced."

By the 1910s, the Gilded Age was coming to an end as the age of tycoons weakened and the underbelly of corruption was exposed.
President Theodore Roosevelt.

Tycoons made their money at the expense of the working class. As newspapers exposed the underlying corruption that allowed an elite few to hoard enormous amounts of wealth, President Theodore Roosevelt imposed new limits on corporate power and established tax and political reforms.

It would take a few more years before the Gilded Age fully ended, but the days of ostentatious eating, spending, and partying were over.

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