Madame Eliza B. Jumel (1775–1865)
Bowen into grinding poverty, the girl who became Eliza Jumel and then Mrs. Aaron Burr was raised in a brothel, indentured as a servant, and confined to a workhouse when her mother was in jail. Yet by the end of her life, “Madame Jumel” was one of New York's richest women. She had
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She used marriages and money to improve her social standing and the legal system to protect her financial security. When she died, her estate was worth some one million dollars, comparable in buying power to $15 million today. Madame Jumel even managed what Alexander Hamilton could not: she triumphed over Aaron Burr.
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"Her history is romantic, strange, eventful, and ahead, in many respects, of the most exciting novel."
--Chauncey Shaffer, 1872
On this website you will find:
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