At the death of her husband in 1906, Mary Muhlenberg Emery (1844-1927)
became one of the richest women in the United States. Recognizing her
vast responsibility, she embarked on a philanthropic program that
endowed or initiated children's programs, hospitals and medical
institutions, orphanages, colleges and universities, an art museum, a
zoological park, various cultural agencies, and other causes that
benefited humankind. Mary Emery's most costly benefactions were directed
to the founding of Mariemont, Ohio, a planned community near Cincinnati,
and to the formation of a major collection of paintings. Her paintings
by such old masters as Titian, Mantegna, Van Dyck, Gainsborough, and
Hals were bequeathed to the Cincinnati Art Museum. This well-illustrated
biography explores her gifts and life from its beginnings in New York
City through family tragedies to the legacy she left behind.