For many years I've enjoyed stories, both fact and fiction, about New York high society but, somehow, have never heard of the story of Emilie Grigsby. Thank you for introducing me to a new---and real life!---story!
I'm very familiar with the history of New York's late 19th and early 20th Century then nouveau riche and I too have never heard the slightest reference to this story.
“Emily had noticed the perverted gaze of the old man” Sorry but I DIED at this part LOL 😂 so funny- but in all seriousness, what a fascinating story! Once again, great video Ken! Keep up the good work! 😃
Miss Emilie Busbey Grigsby was really an interesting personality and woman. She went after what she wanted and succeeded. And she seemed very happy, popular and intelligent. Not a bad life at all.
I was on the edge of my seat thru this entire video for fear that she would wind up destitute living in some cheap hotel - thank God she must have had enough sense to stay solvent. One point comes thru loud & clear - when it comes to women, physical beauty is one thing, but a women who is intelligent and well informed and has a keen mind is doubley attractive.
@@653j521 she was not worth a dime when she met Yerkes - if you have never met a women who had the intellectual refinements that Emilie had you cannot appreciate what Mr Yerkes Sr. saw in addition to her physical beauty . He allowed her to spend his money because she knew what she was buying - she was not just some barroom trollop.
Wow. She died a year before I was born. This is a beautiful story. We are all born into a situation. Nobody has a choice about the matter. Some people have their noses so stuck up in the air, that they don't see the value, talents, and abilities of others.
Just discovered your channel and I find these US old houses fascinating. I'm from the UK where we are awash with them so it's sad to find out that most of yours seem to have been demolished.
A girl raised in private schools, already knowing at 16 what she needed to go after!! Wow! Her mother must have impressed upon her how to avoid the long fall into poverty , that she herself was so afraid of. But what a choice to keep the income up, instead of marrying again after her husband died. She had to be a piece of work herself.
@@PatrickFDolan More like 60 and older the closer they get to being born in the 1900s unless they were poor and exposed to toxins (for example factory workers) and diseases. I own a house that was ompleted in 1899 and I’ve been doing research on all the people who owned it during the years. The people who lived in my house were upper middle class to middle class and then working class around the 1950s. The people born in the middle 1800s who lived in my house lived into their 60s or a little longer but the people who were born into the late 1800s to early 1900s all lived very long lives. I even had a guy who managed to survive fighting in both World Wars and died in his 80s. A woman who lived in my house was born in 1909 died in in 1990. She died 5 years before I was born and we went to the same high school.
@@PatrickFDolan that's the average of everyone. But like I said, the people who lived in my house were upper-middle-class to middle class and they lived to be pretty old. Even my family, who still lived close to the plantations where we were enslaved on, so I know life wasn't easy for them and they lived longer than 40. Even 46 is older than what you originally said and just two years later, people in the US were expected to live to 53 on average. The more money you had, the longer you were expected to live because you didn't come into contact with so many toxic things and you had better access to healthcare. What I have noticed about marriage is that people did get married younger, but from what I've seen it was still 18-20 something. I know my great-grandmother (born in 1898) was married at 16 but again, they were still living near the plantation and working on that land. All 5 of the families that have owned my house (even my grandparents) were all married in their 20s. And their children were also married in their 20s. The oldest match was born in 1862 (died in 1923) and 1861(died in 1944) and they were married in 1889. But then again, they were well off. And that's the pattern I've noticed as I've helped others research their families. I work for a library. Poor people tended to get married young, have children at younger ages, and die earlier. A lot of this has to do with money and access. My family married young and had children young because they needed more people to work the fields and there was still a strong belief in marriage. As my family has moved through the generations and moved to the city and out of the deep south, we got married later and had children later.
I am saddened that her home was torn down. It would have made a very interesting museum, so tourists could take a look at high society in America from long ago.
What a fascinating and deeply engrossing video! But alas, everything, no matter how beautiful and engrossing, and every fairy tale also will end, not always as "they lived happily ever after." Thanks for uploading this video. I enjoyed watching it. Yesh Prabhu, Bushkill, PA
I just came across your channel. This story really grabbed my attention as I live in brown county ohio. Brown county is about 30 miles east of Cincinnati. Our history is always interesting, thanks for sharing this.
You’re a good man Ken people need to get help if they are feeling hopeless! Thank you for supplying that contact. I was a patrolman for 18 years and have been to many many suicides and the damage it does is unbelievable and is so ugly. It affects the first responders and police too. Thank you again
This kind of stories gets my attention because l always wonder what ever happen to those people and how they end up and what ever happen to does people thanks for the interesting story, hope you have some more to hear.
@@katherinechase3674Why get married when she got everything she wanted without having to get married? I have no idea how she thought of all of that at 16. If i had that wit and cunningness at 16, I would have found a rich old married man and done the same. Me now knowing that men love little girls means I could have had the world as a teen lmao
@@bigredc222 Tapestries have been cut down & been reused for centuries. Fabric with localized wear or damage is often reused being too good to discard. The patina of age old that fabric has doesn't hurt either.
@@johnvonundzu2170 My impression of her would be that she would have no problem buying a pristine antique tapestry and having it cut up to cover a few chairs.
Ken, I beg to differ on the Rose Bedroom. Those chairs are embroidered with Napoleon I's personal signet. that would make them 1st Empire not Louis. If they are genuine they were probably worth more than the tapestries.
Love your stories. Always carefully researched. Their is one room however, that rather than being Louis XIV is Empire style. I would even venture to ask if those chairs with Napoleon’s crest were actually his.
Neat story... similar to Miss Nesbits'. Neat ole apt house still standing...but so sorry her house torn down...I think we should preserve our old structure s ....I live in a classic neighborhood I n my town ..also grew up in one in Ft Worth .. so much History...my house is vintage also...I n process of not remodeled but " " re- freshing it ..w white paint to brighten up old house ......🦋
Interesting to see that long, skinny house! I cringed at the cutting up of tapestries, though. The story sounds like something out of an Edith Wharton novel. Scandals are nothing new!
Wow, what a story! She lived life in the fast lane and drove like Paul Newman, apparently. 😂 I would venture to say she had a very high IQ, understood human nature completely, and had more charm than the law allowed. Judging by the photos, she had a great sense of humor and fun. For some reason I'm thinking of the film 'Harold & Maude.' 😜
I am pretty sure that cutting up centuries-old tapestries to use for reuphostering chairs de-values the tapestries, but I guess she didn't care. I also wonder if the relationship between the rich old guy & his heartbroken son became cold as ice after Emelie chose the elder. Anyway, I sure hope her music room with gold-leafed keys was at least enjoyed by the most celebrated musicians of the day. After all the photo of the guest room looked quite lovely.
Doubting the cut-up tapestries were in pristine condition; they were probably partially damaged and not really ia a fit state for display before being cut up. There are many chopped up tapestries out there - hanging on a wall for centuries is hazardous!
A happy ending? She slept with a married man for years, a man with a wife and children, decades her senior in order to inherit his fortune because she imagined she was a, "lady". Yeah, she's a real peach.
@@SlimKeith11 At a time when women had no power and no agency, she made a life for herself on her own terms. You would have preferred that she starved in the streets? You might want to do some research on how badly off women were back then. You might find your judgement changing.
I really liked this story Emily was ahead of her time. Her widowed mom found a way (many would agree not a respectable profession) to get her two children ahead. Provided them with an excellent education and I am sure though Emily aim high my girl, and that she did. Smart intelligent an knowledgeable. Shame she did not find a love to share her interesting life with and then no children, but in the end according to the video she was a very happy woman. I am glad she was accepted the second time around in England's Society as they were/are not immune to scandal. RIP beautiful "lady" Emily Grigsby.
How in the world, netflix didn't make a series about this girls, it's so amazing and good. 4 seasons at least 🤣
you better write to Netflix
Unfortunately, NF typically doesn’t do anything past 2 seasons 🙄(boooo)
@@BennyB5555 - not true
that requires knowledge and talent.....so...
@@desyreemalig9329 yes true - it’s a thing.
The people who built these houses are almost as interesting as the houses themselves
Eh
Actually they are more interesting...
Yeah it's like they were built by another civilization besides ours in our square boxes 👍
@@dennisbranham5153 you sir I am following what your saying and agree.
created a lot of jobs, an Era for Crasftman and artists.
For many years I've enjoyed stories, both fact and fiction, about New York high society but, somehow, have never heard of the story of Emilie Grigsby. Thank you for introducing me to a new---and real life!---story!
I was just about to comment, this sounds like a perfect HBO series!! Never heard of her but i would totally watch a show made about her
do you know where i can find stories about nyc high society? thx
I'm very familiar with the history of New York's late 19th and early 20th Century then nouveau riche and I too have never heard the slightest reference to this story.
Yeah, I wonder if this is a real story.
You should visit Tom millers blog Daytonian at Manhattan
“Emily had noticed the perverted gaze of the old man”
Sorry but I DIED at this part LOL 😂 so funny- but in all seriousness, what a fascinating story! Once again, great video Ken! Keep up the good work! 😃
yep .... another female who refused to honour the wedding ring on another woman's hand
@@ivanolsen7966 I guess she was blinded by dreams of personal acquisitiveness.
She was the original Anna Nicole Smith.
@@ivanolsen7966 ===q qwerty
@@ivanolsen7966 And another man who refused to honor the wedding ring he placed on his wife's finger.
Miss Emilie Busbey Grigsby was really an interesting personality and woman. She went after what she wanted and succeeded. And she seemed very happy, popular and intelligent. Not a bad life at all.
Somebody needs to make a movie about this woman.
What a unique home! I hate that it was torn down, it seems progress has no future sense in preserving something unique.
Right! I would love to see that building in person it looks soo unique
@@rightweaponry908 Alas, the lost vanderbilt mansions make this look like a dump.
newyork would turn in to european cities in the end then. just a bunch of old houses.
Nothing is sacred.
So why didn’t you use your millions of dollars to buy it, restore it, and let it sit there!?!?
I was on the edge of my seat thru this entire video for fear that she would wind up destitute living in some cheap hotel - thank God she must have had enough sense to stay solvent. One point comes thru loud & clear - when it comes to women, physical beauty is one thing, but a women who is intelligent and well informed and has a keen mind is doubley attractive.
You don't think being rich, rich, rich beyond avarice also had something to do with her attractiveness?
@@653j521 If they were all saying that every conversation was poorer without her presence, then her brains and wit were what drew people.
@@653j521 she was not worth a dime when she met Yerkes - if you have never met a women who had the intellectual refinements that Emilie had you cannot appreciate what Mr Yerkes Sr. saw in addition to her physical beauty . He allowed her to spend his money because she knew what she was buying - she was not just some barroom trollop.
@@antonfarquar8799 that's a nice-ish way of telling someone that their taste is all in their mouth.
So she was an intelligent adulteress.
What a woman. She used her looks to her advantage together with book knowledge. It's not easy to climb ranks (even today) in two different countries.
Uh yes it is. Just make an Instagram wearing tight clothing.
Wow. She died a year before I was born.
This is a beautiful story. We are all born into a situation. Nobody has a choice about the matter. Some people have their noses so stuck up in the air, that they don't see the value, talents, and abilities of others.
Just discovered your channel and I find these US old houses fascinating. I'm from the UK where we are awash with them so it's sad to find out that most of yours seem to have been demolished.
Really interesting story. So sad that the building Is gone but pleased that Emilie in the end was happy.
Man its so sickening that this gorgeous house castle was torn down. What a shame
A girl raised in private schools, already knowing at 16 what she needed to go after!! Wow!
Her mother must have impressed upon her how to avoid the long fall into poverty , that she herself was so afraid of. But what a choice to keep the income up, instead of marrying again after her husband died. She had to be a piece of work herself.
Most people were already married with a few children by sixteen back then. Life expectancy was very low back then. I'm thinking around 35 or 40.
@@PatrickFDolan More like 60 and older the closer they get to being born in the 1900s unless they were poor and exposed to toxins (for example factory workers) and diseases. I own a house that was ompleted in 1899 and I’ve been doing research on all the people who owned it during the years. The people who lived in my house were upper middle class to middle class and then working class around the 1950s. The people born in the middle 1800s who lived in my house lived into their 60s or a little longer but the people who were born into the late 1800s to early 1900s all lived very long lives. I even had a guy who managed to survive fighting in both World Wars and died in his 80s. A woman who lived in my house was born in 1909 died in in 1990. She died 5 years before I was born and we went to the same high school.
@@tylerbhumphries I looked it up. Life expectancy in 1900 was 46.3 years for both genders.
@@PatrickFDolan that's the average of everyone. But like I said, the people who lived in my house were upper-middle-class to middle class and they lived to be pretty old. Even my family, who still lived close to the plantations where we were enslaved on, so I know life wasn't easy for them and they lived longer than 40. Even 46 is older than what you originally said and just two years later, people in the US were expected to live to 53 on average.
The more money you had, the longer you were expected to live because you didn't come into contact with so many toxic things and you had better access to healthcare. What I have noticed about marriage is that people did get married younger, but from what I've seen it was still 18-20 something. I know my great-grandmother (born in 1898) was married at 16 but again, they were still living near the plantation and working on that land. All 5 of the families that have owned my house (even my grandparents) were all married in their 20s. And their children were also married in their 20s. The oldest match was born in 1862 (died in 1923) and 1861(died in 1944) and they were married in 1889. But then again, they were well off. And that's the pattern I've noticed as I've helped others research their families. I work for a library. Poor people tended to get married young, have children at younger ages, and die earlier.
A lot of this has to do with money and access. My family married young and had children young because they needed more people to work the fields and there was still a strong belief in marriage. As my family has moved through the generations and moved to the city and out of the deep south, we got married later and had children later.
@@PatrickFDolan That's nonsense. You should check actual average marriage age.
Thank you for that very interesting and unusual glimpse into the glamorous and unknown (to me) past of this wonderful character!
Fascinating woman, thanks for spotlighting her!!!!!
Thanks for sharing the fascinating story about Emilie Grigsby & her New York mansion!!! 👍👍🙂
@@martinswillaim3146 Howdy!!
Just discovered your channel and really enjoying it. Well-done with the thorough research and quality.
Love old amazing homes and history keep them coming.
This video was a breathe of fresh air!
I am saddened that her home was torn down. It would have made a very interesting museum, so tourists could take a look at high society in America from long ago.
What a fascinating and deeply engrossing video! But alas, everything, no matter how beautiful and engrossing, and every fairy tale also will end, not always as "they lived happily ever after." Thanks for uploading this video. I enjoyed watching it.
Yesh Prabhu, Bushkill, PA
Thank you for this - this story is a movie just waiting to happen.
Thank you, I enjoyed hearing Emilie's story.
Great job. Fascinating story. First thing that came to mind when I heard her name was "Eleanor Rigby"
ALL RIGHT, THIS HOUSE! Subscribed!
I just came across your channel. This story really grabbed my attention as I live in brown county ohio. Brown county is about 30 miles east of Cincinnati. Our history is always interesting, thanks for sharing this.
This was a house that I was not familiar with (nor the Yerkes mansion either). Thank you for the information.
I’m so glad I found this channel.., I love the stories and the stories behind the homes…
Fascinating story! What secrets those walls held.
Some of the back stories you get on these houses is hinky but these buildings man they're just incredible 👍 great channel content thank you I'm in 👍🤓
This was well told. Thank you
You’re a good man Ken people need to get help if they are feeling hopeless! Thank you for supplying that contact. I was a patrolman for 18 years and have been to many many suicides and the damage it does is unbelievable and is so ugly. It affects the first responders and police too. Thank you again
Fascinating history! Thank you, loved it!
It is nice for the story to have a cheerful end, apart from the demolition of the building.
Thank you for the video!
This kind of stories gets my attention because l always wonder what ever happen to those people and how they end up and what ever happen to does people thanks for the interesting story, hope you have some more to hear.
Smart woman. It's too bad that they took down the building. Interesting story.
She was set up for life (financially) at such a young age. Interesting that she never married. She was a free bird!
@@katherinechase3674Why get married when she got everything she wanted without having to get married? I have no idea how she thought of all of that at 16. If i had that wit and cunningness at 16, I would have found a rich old married man and done the same. Me now knowing that men love little girls means I could have had the world as a teen lmao
I love how short your videos are. They’re just jampacked with information and I have time to watch them! :-)
Wow. I am a Grigsby and this is the first I've ever heard of her. Interesting video.
That was so wonderful! It is pleasant to have a happy ending.
I love her obsession with antiques but cutting old tapestries? That's a hard no.
I'm guessing tapestries cut up for upholstery were already damaged and more use in pieces than as a whole.
@@johnvonundzu2170 You don't know that, you're just making that up because it sounds better.
@@bigredc222 Tapestries have been cut down & been reused for centuries. Fabric with localized wear or damage is often reused being too good to discard. The patina of age old that fabric has doesn't hurt either.
@@johnvonundzu2170 My impression of her would be that she would have no problem buying a pristine antique tapestry and having it cut up to cover a few chairs.
Yes 'I'm with you on that.
What a great story, both about the house and the lady. Fascinating. 😀
Great video!!! Didn’t know this but she was definitely an independent woman.
This was well put together and reserched.thank you for the upload💚
Very interesting. She must have had great fun and adventures while walking a tightrope of her family history.
Ken, I beg to differ on the Rose Bedroom. Those chairs are embroidered with Napoleon I's personal signet. that would make them 1st Empire not Louis. If they are genuine they were probably worth more than the tapestries.
The Lady sounds like a real pistol!
I don't believe anyone in her presence could be bored. Thank you very much.🦋🐈⬛🍃
Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!
Fun to learn these histories
Just found your channel. I'm so impressed. Just subscribed. Really interesting material!
It's amazing what a person can have or do when they have money 💰👸💰👸💰
That is a wonderful and interesting story. Thanks for sharing it.
Very cool video Ken. I love the history of it.
Fabulous Story! What A Beautiful Mansion...💖
Love your stories. Always carefully researched. Their is one room however, that rather than being Louis XIV is Empire style. I would even venture to ask if those chairs with Napoleon’s crest were actually his.
I was trying to work out who the N was ! Thank you !
Neat story... similar to Miss Nesbits'. Neat ole apt house still standing...but so sorry her house torn down...I think we should preserve our old structure s ....I live in a classic neighborhood I n my town ..also grew up in one in Ft Worth .. so much History...my house is vintage also...I n process of not remodeled but " " re- freshing it ..w white paint to brighten up old house ......🦋
VERY interesting thank you!!!
Thank you for being such an interesting channel
Fascinating. Thanks for sharing.
Very finely done series.
Just…WOW!!
Another good video, Ken. I'm still impressed with your research.
Awesome video I always enjoy them
This was so good. I've watched it. 5 times . Thanx
Very well done thank you so much so enjoyable
Wow. Amazing life, she led 👍🏻❤️. Way ahead of her time.
Ken,
Great presentation. A+
Glad you enjoyed it!
This was really interesting. Thank you so much
I love your channel! It’s so excellent
Interesting to see that long, skinny house! I cringed at the cutting up of tapestries, though. The story sounds like something out of an Edith Wharton novel. Scandals are nothing new!
Edith wrote the world she knew.
Tapestries suffer with time and frequently end up being cut up & re-used, it's been going on for centuries.
Wow, what a story! She lived life in the fast lane and drove like Paul Newman, apparently. 😂 I would venture to say she had a very high IQ, understood human nature completely, and had more charm than the law allowed. Judging by the photos, she had a great sense of humor and fun. For some reason I'm thinking of the film 'Harold & Maude.' 😜
YES, she looks a lot like Maude. You are right.
What a great story thanks for the video
OMG i am so jealous. I was looking for this my whole life.
The polar bear rug 😍
I love her smile in the last photo, good for her! She overcame! I would have loved to have known her.
But than I'd be dead and dust by now. 😉
Great video, keep it up!🇬🇧💂🏦
Thank you!
Is there a few books I can purchase that would help me become familiar to the terminology of the construction?
I am pretty sure that cutting up centuries-old tapestries to use for reuphostering chairs de-values the tapestries, but I guess she didn't care. I also wonder if the relationship between the rich old guy & his heartbroken son became cold as ice after Emelie chose the elder. Anyway, I sure hope her music room with gold-leafed keys was at least enjoyed by the most celebrated musicians of the day. After all the photo of the guest room looked quite lovely.
Furniture of reclaimed tapestry 😂
Doubting the cut-up tapestries were in pristine condition; they were probably partially damaged and not really ia a fit state for display before being cut up. There are many chopped up tapestries out there - hanging on a wall for centuries is hazardous!
OK guess I'm second 🤪 🤣 Good morning to everyone, hope you're all doing well 😊💝💝 Thank you for the very interesting story 😊
Good morning, glad you enjoyed it!
Cool..I really enjoyed this..
Well done ✌️🍷🖤
You need to do a video on Boldt Castle 🙌🏻
Great story with a happy ending! I love it. I saw Princess Elizabeth in one of those photos.
A happy ending? She slept with a married man for years, a man with a wife and children, decades her senior in order to inherit his fortune because she imagined she was a, "lady". Yeah, she's a real peach.
@@SlimKeith11 At a time when women had no power and no agency, she made a life for herself on her own terms. You would have preferred that she starved in the streets? You might want to do some research on how badly off women were back then. You might find your judgement changing.
@@SlimKeith11 He sure did seem willing. Wanting her at his deathbed. Don't just demonize the women-
Such a cool story. Good research.
How on earth could anyone tear something like that down???
Very interesting- thank you! ♥️
Frisk on 5th Ave still there now a museum. Dodge mansion on 5th. Please profile.
Thank you for the suggestion!
I’ve always wondered about the house on Madison @ 37th street. It’s currently the Polish Consulate.
Frick
Excellent!
Why would anyone replace that beautiful piece of architecture with that hideous apartment house?
She was fortunate enough to live her life on her terms. Good for her!
Now that was interesting!
You should do the S.K Pierce mansion in Gardener Massachusetts (it still stands today and can be toured)
Remarkable woman! She had her cake AND ate it, too!
Lovely story..
Wow. She must have been very charismatic .
Wow she was fascinating
Now that is a real socialite!
What a wonderful woman.
I really liked this story Emily was ahead of her time. Her widowed mom found a way (many would agree not a respectable profession) to get her two children ahead. Provided them with an excellent education and I am sure though Emily aim high my girl, and that she did. Smart intelligent an knowledgeable. Shame she did not find a love to share her interesting life with and then no children, but in the end according to the video she was a very happy woman. I am glad she was accepted the second time around in England's Society as they were/are not immune to scandal. RIP beautiful "lady" Emily Grigsby.
The story of the old man and his son reminds me of the plot of Barbara Stanwyck's 1933 movie "Baby Face".
Wow... fascinating...