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  2. Stuyvesant Fish (June 24, 1851 – April 10, 1923) was an American businessman and member of the Fish family who served as president of the Illinois Central Railroad. He owned grand residences in New York City and Newport, Rhode Island , entertained lavishly and, along with his wife "Mamie" , became prominent in American high society during the ...

    • American
    • Livingston Fish, Marian Anthon Fish, Stuyvesant Fish, Jr., Sidney Webster Fish
  3. Marion Graves Anthon Fish (nickname, "Mamie"; June 8, 1853 – May 25, 1915), often referred to by contemporaries as Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, was an American socialite and self-styled "fun-maker" of the Gilded Age. She and her husband, Stuyvesant Fish, maintained stately homes in New York City and Newport, Rhode Island.

    • American
    • Livingston Fish, Marian Anthon Fish, Stuyvesant Fish Jr., Sidney Webster Fish
    • "Mamie", Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish
    • John Anthon (grandfather)
  4. Aug 19, 2021 · In 1876, she made an advantageous match when she married her childhood sweetheart, Stuyvesant Fish, a businessman and son of former Secretary of State Hamilton Fish. A Knickerbocker who could trace his family back to the Mayflower, Stuyvesant possessed two things vital to Mamie’s success: social standing and money.

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  5. Stuyvesant Fish (June 24, 1851 – April 10, 1923) was an American businessman and member of the Fish family who served as president of the Illinois Central Railroad. He owned grand residences in New York City and Newport, Rhode Island, entertained lavishly and, along with his wife "Mamie", became prominent in American high society during the ...

  6. Jan 24, 2024 · Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, known to all as just Mamie Fish, was one of the more larger-than-life personalities of the Gilded Age, a hostess who thrived within the confines of high society. Who was this enigma of the Newport set?

  7. Jul 17, 2012 · "Crossways" The Stuyvesant Fish Cottage, Newport. When Marion Graves Anthon Fish a.k.a. "Mamie" decided she wanted a cottage in Newport, she wasn't thinking of a French chateau or a French Renaissance palace, but a colonial estate, American through and through.

  8. views 1,791,343 updated. Stuyvesant Fish (stī´vəsənt), 1851–1923, American railroad executive, b. New York City; son of Hamilton Fish (1808–93). He became (1877) a director of the Illinois Central RR, and as its president (1887–1907) he built the railroad into a large system.

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