Carrie Astor Wilson


Caroline Schermerhorn Astor Wilson was an American heiress and prominent member of New York society.

Early life

Caroline Schermerhorn Astor was born in New York City on October 10, 1861, and was known as "Carrie". She was the fourth of five children born to William Backhouse Astor Jr. and Caroline Schermerhorn Astor, leader of the "Four Hundred". Her three elder sisters were Emily Astor, who married sportsman and politician James Van Alen; Helen Astor, who married diplomat James Roosevelt Roosevelt ; and Charlotte Astor, who married James Coleman Drayton and, after his death, George Ogilvy Haig. She had one younger brother, Colonel John Jacob Astor IV, who died aboard the RMS Titanic in 1912.
Carrie was a descendant of many prominent Americans. Her paternal grandparents were William Backhouse Astor Sr. and Margaret Astor while her maternal grandparents were Abraham Schermerhorn and Helen Van Courtlandt Schermerhorn. She was also a great-granddaughter of John Jacob Astor, America's first millionaire, wealthy merchant Peter Schemerhorn, and Continental major and U.S. Senator John Armstrong Jr. and Alida Armstrong. Her uncle John Jacob Astor III was the father of William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor.
Carrie grew up at her parents New York brownstone, 350 Fifth Avenue, at the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street, known for its ballroom.

Society life

In 1883, wealthy socialite Alva Vanderbilt, the then wife of railroad manager William Kissam Vanderbilt, planned an elaborate masquerade ball for 1,000 guests to celebrate the opening of her new home at 660 Fifth Avenue, known as the Petit Chateau. The ball was to feature entertainment given by young society figures, including a dance which young Carrie was to participate in. Unfortunately, at the last minute, Carrie was notified that she could not participate, because Carrie's mother, the Mrs. Astor and the undisputed head of New York society, had never formally "called upon" Alva. In order to appease Carrie and allow to her attend the ball, Mrs. Astor proceeded to leave her calling card at the Vanderbilt's resident prior to Alva's lavish ball. Alva then extended an invitation to the Astors and Carrie's mother attended the ball and reciprocally invited the Vanderbilts her annual ball, which was considered a formal acknowledgement of the Vanderbilt's full acceptance into the upper echelon of New York society.
After her 1884 marriage, Carrie became a noted society hostess in her own right. Despite her family's initial reluctance at the marriage, her father purchased them a new home at 414 Fifth Avenue as a wedding present, which was furnished Wilson's father.
For many years, Carrie and her sister-in-law, Grace Vanderbilt, shared Box 3 at the Metropolitan Opera House, "alternating as hostess on opening night."

Move uptown

After her mother's fallout with Carrie's cousin William Waldorf Astor over the use of the name "Mrs. Astor", which led to the construction of the opulent Waldorf Hotel next to her mother's residence, Mrs. Astor decamped from 34th Street and tore down Carrie's childhood home to build the larger and even more grand Astor Hotel. Her mother also built a new Astor residence uptown, at the northeast corner of Fifth and East 65th Street, for Mrs. Astor and Carrie's brother, John Jacob Astor IV, at 841 and 840 Fifth Avenue and designed by society architect Richard Morris Hunt. At the inaugural ball at her mother's new residence on February 3, 1896, Carrie led the cotillion in the new ballroom while her brother's wife led the cotillion from the other side.
The feud with Carrie's cousin extended to Carrie as well and led her husband to hire Warren and Wetmore to design an uptown residence for the couple on East 64th Street. Wilson bought the property in 1896, began construction in 1900, and the six-story limestone mansion with forty rooms was completed in 1903. Carrie's house was around the corner from her mother and located at the northeast corner of Fifth and East 65th Street. The sixty-five feet wide residence had a Beaux Arts facade of Indiana Limestone and a mansard roof of blue slate and featured five bays and featured a circular atrium. On January 21, 1904, Carrie hosted the first large party in their new house, which featured a performance by opera singers Mme. Lillian Nordica and Enrico Caruso.
A member of the Colony Club, Carrie served as the vice-president of the New York Women's League for Animals and was a director of the Beekman Street Hospital. She donated to the Merchant Marine Library Service.

Personal life

In the early 1880s, Carrie met and fell in love with Marshall Orme Wilson, although her family disapproved of him and his family. He was the eldest son of Richard Thornton Wilson, a banker from Tennessee who had served the Commissary-General of the Confederacy and became rich investing in railways. Wilson and his siblings were known in New York and Newport society as the "Marrying Wilsons" due to their marriages into the wealthiest and most prominent families. His sister Grace married Cornelius Vanderbilt III, and his brother, Richard Jr. was married to Marion Steedman Mason. Another sister, Belle, was married to Sir Michael Henry Herbert, and Mary, who married New York real estate heir Ogden Goelet.
Reportedly, Carrie "starved herself into bulimia until her mother gave in and agreed to the marriage." On November 18, 1884, Carrie was married to Wilson at the Astor mansion. Together, Orme and Carrie had two sons:
Her husband died on April 1, 1926, in New York City, and he was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. In his will, Carrie received their residence and all of its belongings, and their sons inherited the residual estate, including funds left by their paternal grandfather in trust for them.
Carried lived another twenty-two years and died on September 13, 1948, at the home of her son Richard, 1 Sutton Place. At the time of her death, she was the last surviving child of her parents. After a funeral at Trinity Church, she was buried alongside her husband at Woodlawn Cemetery. After her death, her former home was sold to the Indian Government to house their diplomats in New York for $500,000.