Social status listing
Portrait of Mrs. Astor  by Carolus-Duran , in Paris 1890.  This painting was placed prominently in Astor's house; she would stand in front of it when receiving guests for receptions. Today, it is held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art .[ 1]   
The Four Hundred  was a list of New York society during the Gilded Age , a group that was led by Caroline Schermerhorn Astor , the  "Mrs. Astor", for many years.  After her death, her role in society was filled by three women: Mamie Fish , Theresa Fair Oelrichs , and Alva Belmont ,[ 2]   known as the "triumvirate" of American society.[ 3]  
On February 16, 1892, The New York Times   published the "official" list of those included in the Four Hundred as dictated by social arbiter Ward McAllister , Astor's friend and confidant, in response to lists proffered by others, and after years of clamoring by the press to know who was on it.[ 4] [ 5]  
 
In the decades following the American Civil War , the population of New York City grew almost exponentially, and immigrants and wealthy  arrivistes  from the Midwestern United States  began challenging the dominance of the old New York Establishment.[ 6]    Aided by McAllister, Astor[ a]   attempted to codify proper behavior and etiquette, as well as determine who was acceptable among the arrivistes ,[ 8]   as champions of old money and tradition.[ 6]  
Reportedly, Ward McAllister  coined the phrase "the Four Hundred" by declaring that there were "only 400 people in fashionable New York Society."[ 9]    According to him, this was the number of people in New York who really mattered; the people who felt at ease in the ballrooms of high society.[ 10]    In 1888, McAllister told the New-York Tribune   that "If you go outside that number," he warned, "you strike people who are either not at ease in a ballroom or else make other people not at ease."[ 11]  
While the number four hundred has popularly been linked to the capacity of Caroline Schermerhorn Astor 's ballroom at her large brownstone home  at 350 Fifth Avenue  and East 34th Street  (today the site of the Empire State Building ),[ 12] [ 13]   the exact origins remain unknown.[ 14]    There were other lists in New York around the same time which necessitated a maximum capacity of four hundred, including Delmonico's restaurant  and local cotillion  dances, that may have contributed to the particular sum of four hundred.[ 15]  
"Snobbish Society's Schoolmaster." Caricature of Ward McAllister  as an ass telling Uncle Sam  he must imitate "an English snob of the 19th century" or he "will nevah be a gentleman". Published in Judge  , November 8, 1890.  
In response to competing lists naming the purported members of New York society published in the New York World   that insisted New York society was, in fact, made up of only 150 people,[ 16]   McAllister spoke with the Times , refuting the World  article and giving the paper the "official list", which was published on February 16, 1892, and quoted McAllister stating:
The so-called Four Hundred has not been cut down or dwindled to 150 names. The nonsense, don't you know, printed to that effect in the World   and some other papers, has made a very bad impression that will reflect badly against them, you understand. That list of names, you understand, printed on Sunday, did not come from me, don't you see. It is unauthorized, don't you see. But it is accurate as far as it goes, you understand.
It is incomplete and does injustice, you understand, to many eligible millionaires. Think of leaving out such names, don't you know, as Chauncey M. Depew , Gen. Alexander S. Webb , Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cooper , Mr. and Mrs. Luther Kountze , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goelet , Mr.  and Miss Wilson , Miss Greene , and many others! Don't you understand, it is absurd, senseless.
Let me explain, don't you know. There are three dinner dances, don't you know, during the season, and the invitations, don't you see, are issued to different ladies and gentlemen each time, do you understand? So at each dinner dance, you know, are only 150 people of the highest set, don't you know. So, during the season, you see, 400 different invitations are issued.
Wait a moment and I will give you a correct list, don't you know, of the people who form what is known as the Four Hundred. Do you understand it will be authorized, reliable, and, don't you know, the only correct list.[ 4] 
 
The list, purported to include the crème de la crème  of New York society, consisted largely of "bankers, lawyers, brokers, real estate men, and railroaders, with one editor (Paul Dana  of The New York Sun  ), one publisher, one artist, and two architects."[ 7]    It also included a mix of both "Nobs" and "Swells".[ 17]   "Nobs" came from old money  (including the Astors , the Goelets , the Livingstons , and the Van Rensselaers ), and "Swells" were representatives of the nouveau riche , whom Astor felt, begrudgingly, were able to partake in polite society (best personified by the Vanderbilt family ).[ 17]  
Criticism and backlash [ edit ]  
"The European Svengali  and the trilbys  of the 'Four Hundred' – He hypnotizes 'em every time!" Illustration  published in Puck  , October 2, 1895.  
After McAllister released the names of the Four Hundred in The New York Times , there was significant backlash, both against the idea of a definitive list of "acceptable society" and McAllister himself.[ 18] [ 19]    The papers dubbed him "Mr. Make-a-Lister" and, in combination with his memoirs published in 1890, entitled Society as I Have Found It ,[ 20]   further ostracized him from the "old guard", who valued their privacy in an era when the leaders of society were the equivalent of modern movie stars.[ 15]    William d'Alton Mann , who owned Town Topics  , a gossip magazine, considered it his duty to expose the sins of society and regularly criticized the Four Hundred.[ 19]  
Several years later, author O. Henry  released a collection of short stories, entitled The Four Million  , a reaction to this phrase, expressing his opinion that every human being in New York was worthy of notice.[ 21]  
In 2009, the Museum of the City of New York  compiled its own list, entitled "The New York City 400", of the 400 "movers and shakers" who made a difference in the 400 years of New York City history  since Henry Hudson  arrived in 1609.  McAllister was "the only person on the original Four Hundred to also make the museum's list."[ 22]  
Photograph of Alva Smith Vanderbilt  at her 1883 Ball as "Venetian Renaissance Lady". Alva, the first wife of William Kissam Vanderbilt  and second wife of Oliver Belmont , was one of Astor's successors. Photographed by José Maria Mora .   
Photograph of Mamie Fish , the wife of Stuyvesant Fish , and one of Astor's successors.  
Portrait of Elizabeth Astor Winthrop Chanler , by John Singer Sargent , 1893.  
Photograph of Chauncey Depew , U.S. Senator  and president of the Vanderbilt's New York Central Railroad , c.  1908 .  
Frank Gray Griswold , financier and writer, 1908. 
Julia Dent Grant , who married Prince Mikhail Cantacuzène  in 1899, was the daughter of Frederick Dent Grant  and granddaughter of U.S. President Ulysses S Grant . Photo taken in 1904.  
Photograph of William Kissam Vanderbilt , first husband of Alva Smith Vanderbilt .  
Photograph of Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt , wife of Cornelius Vanderbilt II , at Alva's 1883 Ball as 'Electric Light'. Gown by Charles Frederick Worth . Photographed by José Maria Mora .  
Portrait of Cornelius Vanderbilt II , husband of Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt , by John Singer Sargent , 1890.  
Portrait of Ruth Livingston Mills , wife of Ogden Mills , by Francois Flmeng.  
A miniature portrait of Cornelia Sherman Martin , wife of Bradley Martin , who threw the infamous Bradley-Martin Ball  in 1897.  
Photograph of Frances Ellen Work , the former wife of James Roche, 3rd Baron Fermoy , c. 1910–1915.  
Portrait of Emily Thorn Vanderbilt , wife of businessman William Douglas Sloane , by Benjamin Curtis Porter , 1888.  
Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes , a merchant and banker, by Cecilia Beaux  c.  1898 .  
Portrait of Florence Adele Vanderbilt Twombly , wife of Hamilton McKown Twombly , by John Singer Sargent , 1890.  
Portrait of George Washington Vanderbilt II , builder of the Biltmore Estate  in North Carolina, by John Singer Sargent , 1890.  
Photograph of William Collins Whitney , former U.S. Secretary of the Navy  (during the Cleveland  administration), c.  1892  photographed by Charles Milton Bell .  
Mrs. Henry Isaac Lorillard Barbey . By Wilhelm Heinrich Funk , 1904. 
Besides containing far fewer than 400 people, McAllister's list "abounded in inaccuracies: names were misspelled or incomplete and many spouses omitted or included although they were dead."[ 23]    The rules of the time dictated that "only the eldest unmarried daughter of a family carried the title 'Miss,' with no given name," but he regularly ignored the rule.[ 23]  
No.
 
Name as it appears in article[ 4]  
 
Full name[ 23]  
  
1, 2 
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Appleton 
Francis R. Appleton Fanny Lanier Appleton  
 
3 
Fred H. Allen 
Frederick Hobbes Allen  
 
4, 5 
Mr. and Mrs. Astor 
William Backhouse Astor Jr. Caroline Schermerhorn Astor  
 
6, 7 
Mr. and Mrs. J.J. Astor 
John Jacob Astor IV [ b] Ava Lowle Willing  
 
8, 9 
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bend 
George H. Bend Elizabeth Austen Townsend Bend  
 
10 
Miss Amy Bend 
Amy Bend  
 
11 
Miss Beatrice Bend 
Beatrice Bend  
 
12, 13 
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bryce 
Lloyd Bryce Edith Cooper Bryce  
 
14 
Mrs. Cavendish Bentinck 
Elizabeth Livingston Cavendish-Bentinck [ c]  
 
15, 16 
Mr. and Mrs. F. Bronson 
Frederic Bronson Sarah Gracie King Bronson  
 
17 
Heber Bishop 
Heber Reginald Bishop  
 
18 
Miss Bishop 
Mary Cunningham Bishop  
 
19 
William Harold Brown 
William Harold Brown  
 
20, 21 
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund N. Baylies 
Edmund L. Baylies Louisa Van Rensselaer Baylies  
 
22 
Mr. Temple Bowdoin 
Temple Bowdoin  
 
23, 24 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Townsend Burden 
I. Townsend Burden Evelyn Byrd Moale Burden  
 
25 
Miss Burden 
Evelyn B. Burden  
 
26 
Mrs. Barbey 
Mary Lorillard Barbey  
 
27 
Miss Barbey 
Eva Barbey  
 
28 
Harold Brown 
Harold Brown  
 
29 
Edward Bulkley 
Edward H. Bulkeley  
 
30, 31 
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Barclay 
James Lent Barclay Olivia Bell Barclay  
 
32 
C. C. Baldwin 
C.C. Baldwin  
 
33 
Miss Baldwin 
Louise Roman Baldwin  
 
34 
C. C. Baldwin Jr. 
C.C. Baldwin, Jr.  
 
35, 36 
Gen. and Mrs. Henry L. Burnett 
Henry Lawrence Burnett Agnes Suffern Tailer Burnett  
 
37 
Mr. Thomas Cushing 
Thomas Forbes Cushing  
 
38 
Miss Edith Cushing 
Edith Howard Cushing  
 
39 
Mr. F. Bayard Cutting 
Robert Bayard Cutting  
 
40 
Miss Coster 
Martha Ellery Coster  
 
41 
Mr. Harry Coster 
Harry Coster Mary Lee Coles Coster  
 
42, 43 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carroll 
Charles Carroll Suzanne Bancroft Carroll  
 
44, 45 
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cary 
Clarence Cary Elisabeth Miller Potter Cary  
 
46, 47 
Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Chandler 
Winthrop Astor Chanler Margaret Terry Chanler  
 
48 
Mrs. Brockholst Cutting 
Marion Ramsay Cutting  
 
49, 50 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cannon 
Henry White Cannon Jennie Curtis Cannon  
 
51 
Robert L. Cutting Jr. 
Robert Livingston Cutting Jr.  
 
52 
Col. J. Schuyler Crosby 
John Schuyler Crosby  
 
53 
Miss Crosby 
Angelica Schuyler Crosby  
 
54, 55 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Bayard Cutting 
William Bayard Cutting Olivia Peyton Murray Cutting  
 
56, 57 
Mr. and Mrs. S. V. R. Cruger 
Stephen Van Rensselaer Cruger Julia Grinnell Storrow Cruger  
 
58 
Rawlings Cottenet 
Rawlins Lowndes Cottenet  
 
59 
F. Brockholst Cutting 
F. Brockholst Cutting  
 
60 
W. Cutting Jr. 
William Bayard Cutting, Jr.  
 
61 
Sir Roderick Cameron 
Sir Roderick Cameron  
 
62 
Duncan Cameron 
Duncan Ewen Cameron  
 
63, 64 
The Misses Cameron 
Catherine Natalie Cameron Anne Fleming Cameron  
 
65, 66 
Mr. and Mrs. James Cross 
Richard James Cross Annie Redmond Cross  
 
67, 68 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cooper 
Edward Cooper Cornelia Redmond Cooper  
 
69, 70, 71 
The Misses Chanler 
Elizabeth Astor Winthrop Chanler Margaret Livingston Chanler Alida Beekman Chanler  
 
72 
William R. Coster 
William B. Coster Maria Griswold Gray Coster  
 
73, 74 
Mr. and Mrs. Elisha Dyer Jr. 
Elisha Dyer III Sidney Turner Swan Dyer  
 
75, 76 
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Elliot 
Duncan Elliot Sallie Hargous Elliot  
 
77, 78 
Mr. and Mrs. George B. De Forest 
George Beach de Forest Jr. Anita Hargous de Forest  
 
79, 80 
Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey M. Depew 
Chauncey Depew Elise Hegeman Depew  
 
81, 82 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic de Peyster 
Frederic James de Peyster Augusta McEvers Morris de Peyster  
 
83, 84 
Dr. and Mrs. Francis Delafield 
Francis Delafield Katherine Van Rensselaer Delafield  
 
85 
Miss Delafield 
Elizabeth Ray Delafield  
 
86, 87 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dana 
Paul Dana Mary Butler Duncan Dana  
 
88 
H. De Courcy Forbes 
H. De Courcy Forbes  
 
89, 90 
Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish 
Stuyvesant Fish Marion Graves Anthon Fish  
 
91, 92 
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Francklyn 
Charles G. Francklyn Susan Sprague Hoyt Francklyn  
 
93 
J. C. Furman 
John C. Furman  
 
94, 95 
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Fish Jr. 
Hamilton Fish, Jr. Emily Mann Fish  
 
96 
Theodore Frelinghuysen 
Theodore Frelinghuysen  
 
97 
Augustus C. Gurnee 
Augustus C. Gurnee  
 
98, 99 
Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Goelet 
Ogden Goelet Mary Wilson Goelet  
 
100 
Mr. Frank G. Griswold 
Frank Gray Griswold  
 
101 
Miss Greene 
Anne Dunkin Greene  
 
102 
Mr. Allister Greene 
Alister Greene  
 
103 
Miss Grant 
Julia Grant  
 
104 
Robert F. Hawkes 
Robert Forbes Hawkes  
 
105, 106 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Howard 
Thomas Howard Rose Post Howard  
 
107, 108 
Mr. and Mrs. Carly Havemeyer 
Charles Frederick Havemeyer Camilla Woodward Moss Havemeyer  
 
109 
Meredith Howland 
Meredith Howland  
 
110, 111 
Mr. and Mrs. Valentine G. Hall 
Valentine Hall Jr. Mary Livingston Ludlow Hall  
 
112 
Miss Hall 
Elizabeth Livingston Hall  
 
113 
John A. Hadden Jr. 
John A. Hadden Jr.  
 
114, 115 
Mr. and Mrs. Columbus Iselin 
Columbus Iselin Edith Colford Jones Iselin  
 
116 
Isaac Iselin 
Isaac Iselin  
 
117 
Mrs. William Jaffray 
Helen Smythe Jaffray  
 
118 
Miss Jaffray 
Helen Frances Jaffray  
 
119 
Mrs. F. R. Jones 
Mary Cadwalader Rawle Jones  
 
120 
Miss Beatrix Jones 
Beatrix Cadwalader Jones  
 
121 
Shipley Jones 
Shipley Jones  
 
122, 123 
Mr. and Mrs. DeLancey Kane 
DeLancey Astor Kane Eleanora Iselin Kane  
 
124 
Nicholas Kane 
Samuel Nicholson Kane  
 
125 
Miss Knowlton 
Mary Knowlton  
 
126 
Miss Sybel Kane 
Sybil Kane  
 
127, 128 
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Kernochan 
James Powell Kernochan Catherine Lorillard Kernochan  
 
129, 130 
Col. and Mrs. Kip 
Lawrence Kip   Eva Lorillard Kip  
 
131 
Miss Kipp 
Edith Kip  
 
132, 133 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Kernochan 
J. Frederic Kernochan Mary Stuart Whitney Kernochan  
 
134 
Miss Lusk 
Anna Hartwell Lusk  
 
135 
Arthur Leary 
Arthur Leary  
 
136 
Mrs. Maturin Livingston 
Ruth Baylies Livingston  
 
137, 138 
Mr. and Mrs. James Lanier 
James F. D. Lanier Harriet Bishop Lanier  
 
139, 140 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Livingston 
Henry B. Livingston Frances Redmond Livingston  
 
141 
Edward Livingston 
Edward Livingston  
 
142 
Miss Clarissa Livingston 
Clarisse Livingston  
 
143 
Edward De Peyster Livingston 
Edward De Peyster Livingston  
 
144, 145 
Mr. and Mrs. Clement C. Moore 
Clement Clarke Moore Laura Williams Moore  
 
146 
Ward McAllister 
Ward McAllister  
 
147, 148 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Marshall 
Charles Henry Marshall Josephine Banks Marshall  
 
149 
Clement March 
Clement March  
 
150, 151 
Mr. and Mrs. O. Mills 
Ogden Mills Ruth Livingston Mills  
 
152, 153 
Mr. and Mrs. B. Martin 
Bradley Martin Cornelia Sherman Martin  
 
154 
F. T. Martin 
Frederick Townsend Martin  
 
155 
Peter Marié 
Peter Marié  
 
156, 157 
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. McVickar 
Harry Whitney McVickar Maud Robbins McVickar  
 
158, 159 
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Morris 
Augustus Newbold Morris Eleanor Colford Jones Morris  
 
160 
Miss Morris 
Eva Van Cortlandt Morris  
 
161, 162 
Mr. and Mrs. R. Mortimer 
Richard Mortimer Eleanor Jay Chapman Mortimer  
 
163 
Miss Morgan 
Anne Morgan  
 
164, 165 
Mr. and Mrs. T. Newbold 
Thomas Newbold Sarah Lawrence Coolidge Newbold  
 
166 
Mrs. Frederick Nelson 
Isabelle Gebhard Neilson  
 
167 
S. H. Olin 
Stephen H. Olin  
 
168, 169 
Mr. and Mrs. C. Oelrichs 
Charles May Oelrichs Blanche de Loosey Oelrichs  
 
170 
James Otis 
James Otis  
 
171 
Miss Otis 
Sarah Birdsall Otis  
 
172 
Edward Post 
Edward C. Post  
 
173 
Richard Peters 
Richard Peters  
 
174, 175 
Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Porter 
Benjamin Curtis Porter Mary Clark Porter  
 
176, 177 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pendelton 
Francis Key Pendleton Elizabeth La Montagne Pendleton  
 
178 
Julian Potter 
Julian Potter  
 
179 
I. V. Packer 
James Vanderburgh Parker  
 
180, 181 
Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Potter 
Howard Nott Potter Ethel Potter  
 
182, 183 
Gen. and Mrs. Pierson 
John Frederick Pierson Susan Augusta Rhodes Pierson  
 
184 
Miss Pierson 
Marguerite Pierson Hull  
 
185, 186 
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Post 
George Browne Post Alice Stone Post  
 
187 
Mrs. William H. Perry 
Constance Frink Perry  
 
188 
Miss Perry 
Bertha Perry Ronalds  
 
189 
Goold H. Redmond 
Goold H. Redmond  
 
190 
Mrs. Rogers 
Susan LeRoy Fish Rogers  
 
191 
Miss Rogers 
Julia Fish Rogers  
 
192 
J. Ritchie 
J. Wadsworth Ritchie  
 
193 
T. J. Oakley Rhinelander 
Thomas Jackson Oakley Rhinelander  
 
194 
Miss Cora Randolph 
Cora Randolph Trimble  
 
195 
Mrs. Burke Roche 
Frances Burke Roche  
 
196, 197 
Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Ripley 
Sidney Dillon Ripley Mary Hyde Ripley  
 
198 
D. T. L. Robinson 
Douglas Robinson Sr.  
 
199 
R. K. Richards 
Robert Kerr Richards  
 
200, 201 
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Robinson Jr. 
Douglas Robinson Jr. Corinne Roosevelt Robinson  
 
202, 203 
Mr. and Mrs. H. Robins 
Henry Asher Robbins Lizzie Pelham Bend Robbins  
 
204 
Miss Sands 
Edith Cruger Sands  
 
205, 206 
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane 
William Douglas Sloane Emily Thorn Vanderbilt Sloane  
 
207, 208 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Schuyler 
Philip Schuyler Harriet Lowndes Langdon Schuyler  
 
209, 210 
Mr. and Mrs. Byam K. Stevens 
Byam K. Stevens Eliza Langdon Wilks Stevens  
 
211 
Lispenard Stewart 
Lispenard Stewart, Jr.  
 
212, 213 
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Sherman 
William Watts Sherman Sophia Augusta Brown Sherman  
 
214 
Miss Adele Sloane 
Florence Adele Sloane  
 
215, 216 
Mr. and Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes 
Anson Phelps Stokes Helen Phelps Stokes  
 
217 
Miss Stokes 
Olivia Egleston Phelps Stokes  
 
218, 219 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Suydam 
Walter Lispenard Suydam Jane Mesier Suydam  
 
220, 221 
Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Sturgis 
Frank K. Sturgis Florence Lydig Sturgis  
 
222 
Miss Elizabeth Stevens 
Elizabeth Callendar Stevens  
 
223 
G. Mead Tooker 
Gabriel Mead Tooker  
 
224 
Miss Tooker 
Charlotte Tooker Warren  
 
225 
E. N. Tailer 
Edward Neufville Tailer  
 
226, 227 
Mr. and Mrs. H. McKay Twombly 
Hamilton McKown Twombly Florence Vanderbilt Twombly  
 
228 
Miss Tailer 
Fannie Bogert Tailer  
 
229 
Marquise de Talleyrand 
Elizabeth de Talleyrand-Périgord  
 
230 
Miss Mabel Van Rensselaer 
Mabel Van Rensselaer  
 
231 
Miss Alice Van Rensselaer 
Alice Van Rensselaer  
 
232, 233 
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt 
Cornelius Vanderbilt II Alice Claypoole Gwynne Vanderbilt  
 
234 
George W. Vanderbilt 
George W. Vanderbilt  
 
235 
Mrs. A. Van Rensselaer 
Louisa Barnewall Van Rensselaer  
 
236 
James Varnum 
James Varnum  
 
237 
Mr. Worthington Whitehouse 
Worthington Whitehouse  
 
238, 239 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Seward Webb 
William Seward Webb Eliza Osgood Vanderbilt Webb  
 
240 
Barton Willing 
John Rhea Barton Willing  
 
241 
Miss Willing 
Susan Ridgway Willing  
 
242, 243 
Gov. and Mrs. Wetmore 
George Peabody Wetmore Edith Keteltas Wetmore  
 
244 
Miss Wetmore 
Edith M. Keteltas Wetmore  
 
245 
Egerton Winthrop 
Egerton Leigh Winthrop  
 
246 
Thomas C. Winthrop 
Thomas C. Winthrop  
 
247 
F. B. Winthrop 
Bronson Winthrop  
 
248, 249 
Mr. and Mrs. Buchanan Winthrop 
Buchanan Winthrop Sarah Townsend Winthrop  
 
250 
Miss Winthrop 
Marie Austen Winthrop  
 
251, 252 
Mr. and Mrs. Ben. Wells 
Benjamin Welles Frances Wyeth Swan Welles  
 
253, 254 
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Whitney 
William Collins Whitney Flora Payne Whitney  
 
255 
Miss Georgiana L. Wilmerding 
Georgiana L. Wilmerding  
 
256 
Mrs. C. A. Whittier 
Elizabeth Chadwick Whittier  
 
257, 258 
Mr. and Mrs. Wysong 
John J. Wysong Martha Marshall Wysong  
 
259 
M. A. Wilkes 
Matthew Astor Wilks  
 
260, 261 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Storrs Wells 
William Storrs Wells Anna Cole Raynor Wells  
 
262, 263 
Gen. and Mrs. Alexander S. Webb 
Alexander S. Webb Anna Remsen Webb  
 
264 
Miss Carrie Webb 
Caroline LeRoy Webb  
 
265 
Alexander S. Webb 
Alexander Stewart Webb  
 
Notes  
^   McAllister called Mrs. Astor "the Mystic Rose," referring to the "figure in Dante 's Paradise   around whom all in Paradise revolve,"[ 7]  
 
^   John Jacob Astor IV  was Caroline's only son. He and his second wife, Madeleine Astor , were on the maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic  .  The richest passenger onboard, he died as it sunk  on April 15, 1912.[ 24]  
 
^   Elizabeth Cavendish-Bentinck , a member of the Livingston family , was included, but her husband, MP  William George Cavendish-Bentinck  was not.  William was a grand-nephew of the 4th Duke of Portland  and great-grandson of the 3rd Duke of Portland , the Prime Minister of United Kingdom  under George III .[ 25]  
 
  
Sources  
^   "Mrs. William Astor (Caroline Webster Schermerhorn, 1831-1908)" . www.metmuseum.org . Metropolitan Museum of Art . Retrieved February 3,  2019 . 
 
^   MacColl, Gail; Wallace, Carol McD (2012). To Marry an English Lord: Tales of Wealth and Marriage, Sex and Snobbery in the Gilded Age  . Workman Publishing. ISBN  9780761171980 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Columbia, David Patrick (August 30, 2007). "The Adventures of Tessie" . New York Social Diary . Retrieved September 10,  2018 .  
 
^ a   b   c   McAllister, Ward (February 16, 1892). "THE ONLY FOUR HUNDRED | WARD M'ALLISTER GIVES OUT THE OFFICIAL LIST. HERE ARE THE NAMES, DON'T YOU KNOW, ON THE AUTHORITY OF THEIR GREAT LEADER, YOU UNDER- STAND, AND THEREFORE GENUINE, YOU SEE"  (PDF) . The New York Times . Retrieved March 26,  2017 .  
 
^   Burrows, Edwin G.; Wallace, Mike (1998). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898  . Oxford University Press . p. 1072. ISBN  9780199729104 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^ a   b   "Vanderbilt Ball – how a costume ball changed New York elite society" . MCNY Blog: New York Stories . August 6, 2013. Retrieved November 12,  2016 . 
 
^ a   b   Bryk, William (August 9, 2005). "The Father of the Four Hundred" . The New York Sun . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Gavan, Terrence (1988). The Barons of Newport: A Guide to the Gilded Age  . Newport, Rhode Island : Pineapple Publications. p. 27. ISBN  9780929249018 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Salvini, Emil R. (2005). Hobey Baker: American Legend  . Hobey Baker Memorial Foundation. p. 3. ISBN  9780976345305 . Retrieved February 27,  2018 .  
 
^   Crain, Esther (2016). The Gilded Age in New York, 1870-1910  . Running Press. p. 135. ISBN  9780316353687 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Somers, Reneé (2013). Edith Wharton as Spatial Activist and Analyst  . Routledge. p. 27. ISBN  9781135922979 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Keister, Lisa A. (2005). Getting Rich: America's New Rich and How They Got That Way  . Cambridge University Press . p. 36. ISBN  9780521536677 . Retrieved October 20,  2017 .  
 
^   Parker, Maggie. "The Four Hundred: Then and Now Tony Abrams has reinvented Gilded Age society. Will you get in?" . Dujour . Retrieved September 22,  2018 .  
 
^   Grimes, William (2009). Appetite City: A Culinary History of New York  . Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 102. ISBN  9781429990271 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^ a   b   Columbia, David Patrick (August 18, 2011). "The First Four Hundred" . New York Social Diary . Retrieved March 1,  2018 .  
 
^   "THE GILT-EDGED 150, Society Leaders Make Fun of McAllister's Roster. | Sarcastic Comments by Mrs. Fish and Mrs. Whitney. | He is Not Society's Arbiter, and Society Accepts No Responsibility for His Acts" . The Evening World  . February 17, 1892. p. 1. Retrieved February 13,  2019 . 
 
^ a   b   Haden-Guest, Anthony (July 25, 2015). "The 400 Hottest New Yorkers…of 1892" . The Daily Beast . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Torgerson, Rachel (May 15, 2015). "What Was it Like to Attend One of Mrs. Astor's Gilded Age Parties in NYC?" . Gotham . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^ a   b   Holland, Evangeline (April 6, 2009). "The Four Hundred" . Edwardian Promenade . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   Ward McAllister (1890)  Society as I Have Found It  , Cassell, New York 
 
^   "WARD M'ALLISTER DEAD; He Had Been Ill for a Week with an Attack of the Grip. THE END WAS UNEXPECTED His Condition Not Considered Serious by His Physicians Until Wednesday Morning – His Long Career as a Society Leader"  (PDF) . The New York Times  . February 1, 1895. Retrieved October 21,  2017 . 
 
^   Roberts, Sam (September 8, 2009). "400 Years and 400 Names: Museum Tweaks City A-List" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^ a   b   c   Patterson, Jerry E. (2000). The First Four Hundred: Mrs. Astor's New York in the Gilded Age  . Random House Incorporated . pp. 207– 234. ISBN  9780847822089 . Retrieved February 3,  2019 .  
 
^   "Noted Men On The Lost Titanic. Col. Jacob Astor, with His Wife. Isidor Straus and Wife, and Benj. Guggenheim Aboard"  (PDF) . The New York Times . April 16, 1912. Retrieved December 10,  2013 . Following are sketches of a few of the well-known persons among the 1,300 passengers on the lost Titanic . The fate of most of them at this time is, of course, not known. Col. John Jacob Astor and Mrs. Astor, Isidor Straus  and Mrs. Straus, J. Bruce Ismay , Managing Director of the White Star Line: Benjamin Guggenheim , and Frank D. Millet , the artist, are perhaps the most widely known of the passengers. ... .  
 
^   "G. CAVENDISH-BENTINCK DEAD | Wife Was Elizabeth Livingston, Sister of Mrs. Ogden Mills"  (PDF) . The New York Times  . August 23, 1909. Retrieved February 24,  2017 .