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  1. 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.

  2. Aug 19, 2021 · Who was Marion Graves Anthon Fish? Born in 1853, Marion Graves Anthon was the daughter of Sarah Attwood and William Henry Anthon. 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.

  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.

  4. Jun 30, 2015 · Marion Graves Anthon Fish, orMamie,” was known for throwing extravagant parties for hundreds to thousands of guests at her opulent homes in New York City and Newport, Rhode Island.

  5. Marion "Mamie" Graves Anthon Fish is an American socialite and "fun-maker" in New York society. She is generally referred to as Mrs. Fish or Mamie Fish. Mrs. Fish is based on a real-life historical figure.

  6. May 9, 2020 · The most irreverent broad of the Gilded Age, Marion (“Mamie”) Fish did not shine with beauty. Nore with education. Heavyset, stern, barely literate, and often quite rude, whatever she lacked in graces she more than made up for in quick wit and acidic tongue.

  7. After her death, her role in society was filled by three women: Mamie Fish, Theresa Fair Oelrichs, and Alva Belmont, known as the "triumvirate" of American society. [3]