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Portraits of a Chosen Empire. Tracing Arabella Huntington Rise to Gilded Power

Par : Kian Tate
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  • Nombre de pages184
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-40710-1
  • EAN9783565407101
  • Date de parution13/04/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille2 Mo
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

She arrived in New York with little more than beauty, wit, and an instinct for the geometry of influence. Arabella Huntington - born Arabella Duval Yarrington in 1850 - would die one of the wealthiest women in American history, her name attached to one of the greatest private art collections ever assembled on the continent. Yet the arc between those two points was neither smooth nor innocent. It was navigated with extraordinary precision through the social labyrinth of the Gilded Age, where a woman's power depended entirely on the men she chose - and who chose her. Her first great alliance was with Collis P.
Huntington, the railroad magnate whose Central Pacific line helped stitch together a transcontinental nation. For years Arabella occupied an ambiguous position in his orbit - intimate companion, trusted confidante, the quiet woman behind one of the era's most aggressive industrial fortunes. When Huntington's first wife died in 1883, Arabella married him, stepping fully into the light of Gilded Age society.
She became not merely a wife, but a curator of legacy - overseeing vast art acquisitions across Europe, developing a taste that rivaled the old continental aristocracies she so admired. After Collis Huntington's death in 1900, Arabella did not retreat. She expanded. Her eventual marriage to his nephew, Henry E. Huntington, merged two of California's greatest fortunes and produced the Huntington Library and Art Gallery in San Marino - an institution that endures to this day as a monument to a woman who understood that beauty, like power, must be collected carefully and displayed with absolute intention.