Alva Belmont
Alva Erskine Belmont (
January 17,
1853 -
January 26,
1933) was a multi-millionaire
American socialite and a major funder of the
women's suffrage movement.
Born
Alva Erskine Smith in
Mobile, Alabama, the daughter of a cotton trader, the
American Civil War ruined her family, who decamped, like many other high-society
Southerners, to
Paris. Her family returned to
America, this time to
New York, after
France's defeat by
Prussia in
1871. Alva's mother was forced to open a boardinghouse on West 23rd Street. Alva resolved to try to marry a rich man, joining New York's belle underground of girls from good Southern families ruined by the Civil War who married New York bankers, brokers and merchants. The technique was for a well-connected female friend to introduce the young woman to a suitable match. Alva had just such a presenter in
MarĂa Consuelo Yznaga del Valle, a childhood friend from Natchez, with grand Cuban-Spanish relations, and who later became the Duchess of Manchester. On
April 20,
1875, Alva married
William Kissam Vanderbilt, son of one of the richest men in America.
Alva worked with architect
Richard Morris Hunt to create a model of a 16th century French chateau at 660 Fifth Avenue. She believed the wealthy had a responsibility to build monuments representing knowledge and culture. In 1891, she worked again with Hunt to design [Marble House] in
Newport,Rhode Island/Newport, a Society summer retreat. When Caroline Astor, queen of "the 400" elite of New York Society snubbed her, Alva held a magnificent masquerade ball that cost three million in current dollars. Unhappy over being unable to get a box at the opera, she pressed for a new
Metropolitan Opera House in New York that could accomodate her family.
Alva and William K. had three children: Consuelo, William K. II, and Harold Stirling. She determined to find an aristocrat husband for Consuelo, and in 1895 maneuvered her into marrying Charles Spencer-Churchill, the 9th Duke of Marlborough. Alva then shocked Society by divorcing Willie K. and receiving a large financial settlement. At that time, divorce was unheard-of among the elite. In 1896 she then married
Oliver Hazard Perry Belmont, another wealthy man five years her junior. She immediately began renovation of his sixty-room Newport mansion,
Belcourt, and had another mansion, Brookholt, built in Hampstead,
Long Island. During this marriage, she became less prominent, and even mocked her earlier social extravagance by having a cigar-smoking chimpanzee as the guest of honor at a dinner party. Belmont died suddently in [1908], upon which Alva felt "called by Christ" to a new cause.
Drawn to the women's suffrage movement by
Anna Shaw, Alva donated large sums to the movement, both in the
United Kingdom and
United States. She founded
Political Equality League(1909) to get votes for suffrage-supporting New York State politicians, and wrote articles for newspapers.Raised in the South, she believed blacks were inferior, yet she befriended
Mary Church Terrill and supported both black women and immigrant activists. During the women's union strikes of the period, she sat in court rooms and paid the bail charges. At first she supported the suffrage organization
NAWSA, but left the organization because she disagreed with its more conservative policies. With
Alice Paul she formed the
National Woman's Party, and became its key theoritician. Her mansions provided meeting places and housing for suffrage workers, and her finances supported the many activities around the country, which included picketing of the White House. She continued to write on behalf of an Equal Rights Amendment, and was president of the NWP in the early 1920s when it sought that law. Overall, Belmont's irascible and commanding temperament served her political cause well.[
1], [
2]
In the mid-1920s she moved to France in order to be near her daughter and work for international women's suffrage. Her funeral in New York included women in suffrage costumes and a political theme. There she died on
January 26,
1933. She is interred in the
Woodlawn Cemetery in
The Bronx,
New York.
"Just pray to God. She will help you."
The Vanderbilt Women: Dynasty of Wealth, Glamour and Tragedy Clarice Stasz. New York, iUniverse, 2000.
*
Consuelo and Alva Vanderbilt: The Story of a Daughter and a Mother in the Gilded Age Amanda Mackenzie Stuart. New York, HarperCollins, 2006.
*
Article on Alva Belmont and other suffragettes from
New York Newsday