Read The Remarkable Rise of Eliza Jumel Online
Authors: Margaret A. Oppenheimer
3
. Eliza Jumel, Eliza and Mathilde Pery, and Nelson and William Chase are identified in NYHS-AHMC, Mauer, Charles Arthur, unsigned letter (probably from Mauer) to Dorothy C. Barack, February 3, 1950. None of the other figures are named. Paul's 1856 passport described him as one meter seventy centimeters tall (just under five foot seven inches), with reddish brown hair, a blond beard, an uncovered forehead, an oval face, a small mouth, and a round chin (ADG, 4 M 738/268).
4
. “Madame Jumel's estate,”
New York Herald
, November 13, 1866, 5.
5
. N.Y. Sup. Ct., Eliza B. Jumel vs. John Flinn, 1860 F-12.
6
.
New York Times
, April 11, 1861, 6 (advertisement).
7
. “The widow of Aaron Burr has her farm surveyedâthe surveyor's bill,”
New York Times
, November 12, 1863, 2.
8
. They are listed in
Trow's New York City Directory ⦠for the year ending May 1, 1859
(New York: John F. Trow, 1858). 1873 Transcript of Record, 308. The property remained in Eliza Jumel's possession at the time of her death (N.Y. Sup. Ct., William Ingles Chase vs. Nelson Chase and others, 1878 (-36).
9
. See
Trow's New York City Directory
for the years ending May 1, 1860, and May 1, 1864; 1873 Transcript of Record, 308.
10
.
Ancestry.com
,
1860 United States Federal Census
[database online] (Provo, UT:
Ancestry.com
Operations, Inc., 2009).
11
. 1873 Transcript of Record, 308. His address continues to be given as “Washington Heights” (or equivalent names for upper Manhattan) in city directories throughout this time period.
12
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 5.
13
. Ibid.
14
. Ibid.
15
. MJM 4.8, two slightly different English translations of a letter from Eliza Jumel to Charles Louis [sic] d'Orléans, prince de Joinville (the addressee's given names were actually François Ferdinand; he had a brother named Louis Charles).
16
. Ibid.
17
. Ibid.
18
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 4.
19
. “Local news ⦠Jumel will case,”
The Sun
, November 13, 1866, 4.
20
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 5.
21
. Ibid.
22
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 4.
23
. Ibid.,
4â5.
24
. Frederick David Bidwell,
Taxation in New York State
(Albany: J. B. Lyon, 1918), 264;
Ancestry.com
,
U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862â1918
[database online] (Provo, UT:
Ancestry.com
Operations, Inc., 2008).
25
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 4. Dr. Alonzo Clarke, a kidney specialist, first visited her in 1863.
26
. Ibid., 5.
27
.
The World
, July 18, 1865, 5 [death notice].
28
. “Obituary. Madam Eliza B. Jumel,”
New York Times
, July 18, 1865.
29
. “Funeral of Madam Jumel,”
The World
, July 19, 1865, 4.
30
. New York City Department of Health, Borough of Manhattan, Register of Deaths, 1798â1865 (available on microfilm at the New York Public Library).
31
. “Obsequies. Funeral of Madame Jumel,”
New York Herald
, July 19, 1865, [1].
32
. Ibid.
33
. “Funeral of Madam Jumel”; “Obsequies. Funeral of Madame Jumel.” The lesson began with 1 Corinthians 15:20.
34
. Ibid.
35
. Ibid.
36
. Plot 498, Westerly Division of Trinity Cemetery and Mausoleum.
1
. “The widow of Aaron Burr,”
New York Observer and Chronicle
, July 20, 1865, 230.
2
. “The contest about the alleged will of the late widow of Aaron Burrâmotion to settle the issuesâover $1,000,000 of property involved,”
New York Times
, February 8, 1866, 2; “The Jumel will case,”
New York Times
, November 13, 1866, 8; “Madame's Jumel's will,”
New York Herald
, February 8, 1866, 8.
3
. “Madame Jumel's estate,”
New York Herald
, November 13, 1866, 5.
4
. Ibid.; “Madame's Jumel's will.” Some of the sources indicate that Rev. Smith was to share in the residuary estate, but the willâat least as reproduced in the February 8 article in the
Heraldâ
barred him from doing so. The accuracy of the
Herald
's transcript cannot be verified, because the original will is missing from the probate files in Manhattan.
5
. Initial estimates of the value of the Jumel estate, made within a year or two of Eliza's death, ranged from “$700,000 or $800,000” to “over a million of dollars” (“The benefit of kindnessâthe will of Madame Jumell [
sic
] Burr,”
New-York Tribune
, August 14, 1865, [8]; “Madame Jumel's estate”). As time passed, the value of the estate was exaggerated, with estimates reaching up to six million dollars (“Current topics,”
Albany Law Journal
, December 7, 1872, 380). It is difficult to pin down an exact figure, and the estate was worth more when it was finally settled than in 1865, due to increasing real estate values. By adding up land sales made in the years after Eliza's death and money received for parcels taken by the City of New York under its power of eminent domain, my best estimate is that the estate was worth approximately one million dollars when Eliza died.
6
. NYHS-JP, box 2, folder A, copy of Eliza B. Jumel's will, July 23, 1851.
7
. N.Y.
Sup. Ct., William Inglis Chase vs. Nelson Chase and others, 1878 C-36 (contains a copy of the October 12, 1865, agreement between Nelson and his children).
8
. There were two agreements, the first for forty thousand dollars and the second, drawn up seventeen months later, for thirty thousand dollars; see “The Jumel will case” and “Law reports,”
New York Times
, October 22, 1870, 3; “The Jumel estate,”
New York Herald
, October 23, 1870, 10. Although it appears that the second agreement was designed to supersede the first, virtually all later references to the deal with the Joneses indicate that forty thousand dollars was the sum paid. William and Eliza would not have been considered Eliza Jumel's legal heirs without these transactions, as their relationship to her was through their mother, Mary, who was the illegitimate daughter of Eliza's sister, Maria. The descendants of a bastard child, even if legitimate themselves, could not inherit from maternal relatives who died intestate. In the absence of a will, they could only inherit from their own mother. The Joneses, in contrast, were Maria's legitimate children, so they could inherit from their mother's sister.
9
. “The Jumel will case.”
10
. Ibid.; B-779, box 112, deposition of Nelson Chase.
11
. “Madame Jumel's will”; B-779, box 112, deposition of Nelson Chase, and box 113, deposition of Eliza J. Caryl. Eliza left Felicie two thousand dollars. Possibly the extra five hundred was negotiated during the litigation after Stephen's death when the delay in payment was agreed upon (the money should have been paid within a year after his decease).
12
. “Charles O'Conor,”
Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature
20, no. 1 (July 1874), 117.
13
. Liber 368:313, 316, 327, 343, 350, 367, 383â84.
14
. N.Y. Ct. Ch., Eliza Jumel vs. Catherine Ottignon and others, BM 709-J; BM 710-J.
15
. Henry Ellsworth Gregory, “Charles O'Conor. 1804â1884,” in
Great American Lawyers
, ed. William Draper Lewis, vol. 5 (Philadelphia: John C. Winston Company, 1908), 92â93.
16
. “Charles O'Conor, Esq., to defend the great state prisoner,”
The Daily Age
[Philadelphia], June 8, 1865, 1.
17
. MJM 4.14, photocopy of a letter from Nelson Chase to Eliza Jumel and Eliza Jumel Chase, February 10, 1852.
18
. “Two will cases,”
New York Observer and Chronicle
, September 14, 1865, 43.
19
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 4.
20
. Ibid.
21
. Ibid.
22
. Ibid.
23
. Ibid.
24
. Ibid.
25
. Ibid.
26
. James C. Mohr, “The paradoxical advance and embattled retreat of the âunsound mind': Evidence of insanity in the adjudication of wills in nineteenth-century America,”
Historical Reflections
24, no. 3 (Fall 1998): 426â27; Yvonne Pitts,
Family, law, and inheritance in America: The social and legal history of nineteenth-century Kentucky
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 84.
27
. Mohr,
“The paradoxical advance,” 417â18.
28
. Ibid., 420â21.
29
. Pitts,
Family, law, and inheritance
, 54.
30
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 5.
31
. Ibid., 4.
32
. “The Jumel will case,”
New-York Tribune
, November 13, 1866, 8. The
Tribune
indicated that Wetmore only “got her to give away about fifty thousand dollars' worth of her property,” but the
Herald
's figure of one hundred thousand dollars appears to be more accurate, considering the individual bequests.
33
. There is no evidence as to whether Nelson would have shared in the residuary estate in Wetmore's draft of the will.
34
. NYHS-JP, box 2, folder H, agreement between Eliza Jumel and Thomas Connolly.
35
. “Madame Jumel's estate,” 4.
36
. Charles Dickens,
Great Expectations
, intro. by Stanley Weintraub (Signet Classic, 1998), 67. A document purporting to be an extract from the diary of Anna Parker, later Mrs. John V. L. Pruyn, appears to have been inspired by
Great Expectations
also (NYHSJP, “From the diary of Miss Anna Parker”). Supposedly it recorded a visit Parker and acquaintances had paid to Eliza in October 1862. In the entry, Parker portrayed Eliza as a mad old woman: rambling on about the past, living in an unkempt house, and keeping her dining room table set with moldering items placed there decades before. However, the likelihood that Parker paid the visit as described is slim, because in 1862 she was already married and had a young son, whereas the diary was said to have been that which she kept as a girl. Anna's son, John V. L. Pruyn Jr., was born in Albany on March 14, 1859, as documented by a record for him in
Ancestry.com
,
U.S. Passport Applications, 1795â1925
(see chap. 6, n. 17). Probably the purported diary entry was prepared for use in the will case, but ultimately not submitted as evidence. It became part of Eliza's legend nonetheless, after being published by her first biographer (Shelton, 188â94).
37
. “The Jumel estate case,”
New York Herald
, January 31, 1873, 11.
38
. “The Jumel estate case”; “Special correspondence. Our New York letter,”
Troy Weekly Times
, June 14, 1873, [1]. Nollston's name is listed on the birth certificate of their daughter Ella (born March 25, 1870), available on
www.FamilySearch.org
(accessed December 27, 2011). Her age comes from the 1880 census; she was then thirty-nine and William was forty. See
Ancestry.com
and the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints,
1880 United States Federal Census
[database online] (Provo, UT:
Ancestry.com
, Inc., 2010).
39
. “The Jumel estate case.”
40
. “Special correspondence. Our New York letter.”
41
. Leslie's age was given as five when the census takers arrived at the mansion on July 11, 1870; see the 1870 United States Census on
www.FamilySearch.org
. Ten years later, in June 1880, census takers on Long Island reported that Louisa was fifteen; see
Ancestry.com
,
1880 United States Federal Census
.
42
. Ibid.
43
. See the entry for William J. [
sic
] Chase in
Trow's New York City Directory ⦠for the year ending May 1, 1857
(New York: John F. Trow, 1856).
44
. “The
Jumel estate case.” Nelson indicated that William was keeping the grocery around the winter of 1864â65, but that dating is belied by the city directories. W. I. Chase & Co., grocers, is listed only once in
Trow's New York City Directory
, for the year ending May 1, 1860.
45
. “The Jumel estate case.”
46
. MJM 98.13, Nelson Chase to Samuel J. Tilden, Esq.
1
. “The Jumel will case,”
New-York Tribune
, January 25, 1868, 7; “The Jumel estateâcard from Mr. Nelson Chase,”
New York Times
, February 1, 1868.
2
. Irving Browne, “Count Johannes,”
The Green Bag
8, no. 11 (November 1896): 435â39; Willis Steell, “Acting âHamlet' behind a net,”
The Theater
10, no. 103 (September 1909): 80.
3
. “The Jumel estate,
New York Herald
, October 23, 1870, 10; Browne, “Count Johannes,” 436; “The Jumel estate,”
New York Herald
, October 22, 1870, 8.
4
. “The Jumel estate,”
New York Herald
, October 22, 1870, 8.