The legal crusade of Myra Clark Gaines (1804?--1885) has all the trappings of classic melodrama -- a lost heir, a missing will, an illicit relationship, a questionable marriage, a bigamous husband, and a murder. For a half century the daughter of New Orleans millionaire Daniel Clark struggled to justify her claim to his enormous fortune in a case that captivated the nineteenth-century public. Elizabeth Urban Alexander taps voluminous court records and letters to unravel the twists and turns of Gaines's litigation and reveal the truth behind the mysterious saga of this notorious woman. Myra, the daughter of real estate heir Clark and Zulime Carrière, a beautiful young Frenchwoman, was raised by friends of Clark and kept ignorant of her real parentage until 1832, when she discovered her true lineage in letters among her foster father's papers. She thereupon returned to Louisiana with tales of a lost will and a secret marriage between Clark and Carrière and claimed to be Clark's missing heir. Was Myra the legitimate daughter of the prominent merchant or the "fruit of an adulterous union?" The courts would decide. The Great Gaines Case wound its tortuous path through the United States legal system from 1834 until 1891. It was considered by the U.S. Supreme Court seventeen times and pursued even after Gaines's death by lawyers trying to recoup fees. By courageously bringing her case to the courtroom and doggedly keeping it there, Alexander asserts, Gaines helped instigate a new type of family law that provided special protection of women, children, and marriages. Though Gaines never recovered more than a tiny fraction of the rumored millions, this riveting chronicle of her struggle for legitimacy and legacy as told by Elizabeth Urban Alexander is a gold mine for anyone interested in legal history, women's studies, or a good yarn superbly spun.
She was a grown woman, a widow, a shop owner. She should not be unsettled by anyone. Nay! I am not afraid, ... No woman can resista sweet scent blended only for her. In a jewelled bottle, perhaps? ... 22 A Notorious Woman.
Reprint, Rockwood, TN: EagleRidge Technologies, 2006. www.roanetnhistory.org/waddellsannals.html. Watson, Harry L. Liberty and Power: The Politics of Jacksonian America.
Scandalous Women tells the stories of the risk takers who have flouted convention, beaten the odds, and determined the course of world events. *When Cleopatra (69 BC-30 BC) wasn't bathing in asses' milk, the last pharaoh of the Ptolemaic ...
A Notorious Woman
Women of Influence Delrose Bramwell-Patterson. missionaries not only, but their way of life became God's way. “I will give you a special type of water that will prevent you from being thirsty again.” Oh, that woman initially thought it ...
In 1895 Scarborough and Milton shot and killed a notorious fugitive, Martin Mrose, while attempting to arrest him on the Rio Grande. Mrose's attorney was John Wesley Hardin, the king of the gunfighters. Wes Hardin had studied law while ...
Presents stories of famous female risk takers who defied convention and beat the odds to make history, including such women as Cleopatra, Emma Hamilton, NAACP founder Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Isadora Duncan.
The Incredible Mrs. Chadwick: The Most Notorious Woman of Her Age
Lewd and Notorious seeks to supply a cultural context for the eighteenth century's antitype of the “ lewd woman . ” Lewd and Notorious looks at the various ways in which the “ lewd ” behavior of the transgressive woman was made ...
I loved this novel.” —Christina Baker Kline, New York Times bestselling author of Orphan Train A brilliant rendering of a scandalous historical figure, Kate Manning’s My Notorious Life is an ambitious, thrilling novel introducing Axie ...