The Silver Queen
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About This Book
Suzanne Egera Bransford Emery Holmes Delitch Engalitcheff gained an H.R.H. before her name via her fourth marriage, to a genuine, if somewhat disreputable, Russian prince. By then she had long been known as the Silver Queen, a reference to the origins of her wealth in the mines of Park City, Utah, that attached to her as she climbed the social ladder of turn-of-the-century high society.
Susie, as friends and family knew her, entertained fabulously at her luxurious houses in Salt Lake City and Pasadena - turning her Gardo House, originally built for Brigham Young's favorite wife, into perhaps Salt Lake's most famous mansion - and became a recognized figure in the social circuit and society publications of the west and east coasts.
She also lost four husbands and a daughter, suffered through headline-grabbing court battles over inheritances, and in an attempt to maintain a passing way of life, ultimately frittered away what wealth the Great Depression did not take.
Susie, as friends and family knew her, entertained fabulously at her luxurious houses in Salt Lake City and Pasadena - turning her Gardo House, originally built for Brigham Young's favorite wife, into perhaps Salt Lake's most famous mansion - and became a recognized figure in the social circuit and society publications of the west and east coasts.
She also lost four husbands and a daughter, suffered through headline-grabbing court battles over inheritances, and in an attempt to maintain a passing way of life, ultimately frittered away what wealth the Great Depression did not take.
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