Dazzling Facts About Marietta Peabody Tree, America’s Golden Girl

Dazzling Facts About Marietta Peabody Tree, America’s Golden Girl

The Girl Who Had It All

Marietta Peabody Tree was born into one of the most respected families in America, and she married her way into some of the most dazzling social circles in the world. The epitome of sophistication, she spent her days charming politicians and even working for them—but underneath the glamor lurked dark secrets and even darker deeds.

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1. She Came From A Powerful Family

Born in 1917 in Massachusetts, Marietta Peabody Tree grew up in a strict household that expected the world of her. The Peabodys were an old Boston Brahmin family and, as such, Marietta’s mother Mary and her father Malcom—an Episcopal minister whose own father was the founder of the famed prep school Groton—insisted their daughter be perfect in every way.

But their home life was far from ideal.

Gettyimages - 517828206, United States Mission Worker Marietta Tree Posing Outdoors 10/24/1963-New York City: Mrs. Marietta Tree standing in front of the United Nations General Assembly Building. She is shown from the waist-up and is holding a briefcase. Bettmann, Getty Images

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2. Her Parents Were Cheap

Although they ran in wealthy circles and their name was gold, the Peabodys had long lost their own money. In order to make ends meet and raise their large family, Marietta’s parents were intensely frugal. This habit grew to bizarre proportions. Reportedly, her mother was once aghast when a houseguest asked her for two lumps of sugar.

All this had an unsettling effect on young Marietta.

Gettyimages - 2220638034, 1965 Press Photo Guest speaker from the United Nations, Ambassador Marietta Tree HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRI 22: Guest speaker from the United Nations, Ambassador Marietta Tree. U.S. Delegate to United Nations' Trusteeship Council. Houston Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers, Getty Images

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3. She Learned To Fake It

The harsher realities of her private life, at least in comparison to her rich friends, combined with her family’s intense need to impress, turned Marietta into a little girl utterly dedicated to putting on a happy front no matter what was going on in her world.

If things were falling apart, she still knew how to turn her charm on. She even had a plan.

Gettyimages - 1079437646, Marietta Tree, visiting corporate leader from U.S.A. at the Hilton Hotel and in the Domain. Marietta Tree, visiting corporate leader from U.S.A. at the Hilton Hotel and in the Domain. October 23, 1981. Fairfax Media Archives, Getty Images

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4. She Had Big Ambitions

After one too many social embarrassments—including being unable to go on expensive trips with friends and having to wear the same dress to multiple debutante balls—Marietta decided she was going to grow up and build a career in the Foreign Service. After all, she was becoming interested in politics, and the move would provide her with financial stability, not to mention an even higher echelon of society to circulate in.

But she got a rude awakening.

Gettyimages - 1460928097, Stassinopoulos/Huffington Wedding, New York Marietta Tree Fairchild Archive, Getty Images

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5. She Learned The Way Into Power

Marietta grew up in a time where, although there were increasing opportunities for girls, women were still mostly expected to be wives and mothers—and not much more. In line with this, she soon had her dreams of the Foreign Service crushed when she found out that the only way to be in it, for a woman anyway, was to marry into it. Well, Marietta could work with that too.

Gettyimages - 	1461047765, Fendi Sister's Fragrance Party, New York Marietta Tree attends the Fendi sisters Carvnevale dinner-dance to celebrate the launch of their signature fragrance, patterned after the Venetian festival the party was hosted by fragrance distributor, Elizabeth Arden and Bloomingdale's Marvin Traub at the Burden mansion on February 18, 1987 in New York...Article title: 'Eye: Fendi Carnevale Fairchild Archive , Getty Images

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6. She Used Her Strengths

While the Peabodys were repressed by nature, Marietta honed her attractiveness like a weapon. As she grew into a bubbly, tall blonde, she had a natural charm with men and, much to her parents' horror, was an incorrigible flirt from a young age. Whenever she happened to appear at the all-boys institution of Groton, where her brothers attended, she created a scene—which was just how she liked it.

It wasn’t the only way she disappointed her parents.

Gettyimages - 1759712393, Claudette Colbert Receives Lord & Taylor's Rose Award Marietta Tree (C) attends an event at the main branch of Lord & Taylor in New York City on November 16, 1983.WWD, Getty Images

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7. She Was A Party Girl

Marietta excelled at athletics in her high school, but never took to academics. In order to avoid college after she graduated, she convinced her parents to send her on a grand tour of Europe, capped off by a finishing school in Florence. Around this time, she predicted her future would contain “Parties, people, and politics”.

She wasn’t wrong, but there was still a twist.

Gettyimages - 1763696162, Metropolitan Museum of Art Gala for WWD, Getty Images

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8. Her Father Forced Her Into School

Eventually, her strict father insisted that Marietta attend college, and she reluctantly enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania in 1936, following her romp around Europe. Although it didn’t last—she soon dropped out—she always did claim, "I'll never stop being grateful to my father for forcing me to go to college. It changed my life”. She wasn’t wrong.

File:University of Pennsylvania College Hall.jpgR. Newell & Sons, Wikimedia Commons

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9. She Ran With A Fast Crowd

During her brief attendance at the University of Pennsylvania, Marietta met Desmond FitzGerald, a prominent New York City lawyer who opened the door for Marietta to Manhattan’s elite. It was exactly the sophisticated world she craved, and her studies immediately took a backseat to partying with the scions of the Astor, Paley, and Warburg families.

Then she really sealed the deal.

File:Stanley Grafton Mortimer Jr. and Barbara Cushing honeymoon in 1940.jpgAnonymousUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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10. Her Life Looked Perfect On The Outside

By the turn of the decade, Marietta and FitzGerald made it official, marrying in what was surely a talked-about high society wedding. Soon after, Marietta gave birth to a daughter, Frances FitzGerald, and the new trio continued on their charmed existence; Marietta would later describe these years as “a fever of happiness”.

But Marietta never could stay happy.

File:Fitzgerald Correspondent, 1966 (49716209311).jpgUSMC Archives from Quantico, USA, Wikimedia Commons

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11. She Clashed With Her Husband

Not long after her wedding, Marietta came to a cold realization—and it was one that would haunt her throughout her life. While she was a staunch Democrat with liberal values, her husband was a dyed-in-the-wool Republican. While these conflicting views had lent a frisson to their courtship, they were now putting strain on their marriage.

So when America entered WWII in 1941, Marietta made a fateful decision.

Gettyimages - 	1461051844, Fendi Sister's Fragrance Party, New York Fairchild Archive , Getty Images

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12. She Looked For A Way Out

With her nascent marriage already crumbling (and her daughter still an infant), Marietta accepted a post at the British Ministry of Information. Desmond FitzGerald, meanwhile, didn’t stay home and worry about his wife: He was commissioned as an officer in the Army and sent as a liaison to the Republic Army of China.

With husband and wife frequently apart, it didn’t take long for Marietta’s naughty side to surface.

File:The Air Ministry, 1939-1945. CH966.jpgRoyal Air Force official photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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13. She Had A Hollywood Affair

In 1945, Marietta found herself passionately entangled with the notoriously volatile and amorous film director John Huston, father of Anjelica, who was 11 years her senior. Like Marietta, Huston was also married, albeit to his second of five wives, and he took her away from her usual world of Manhattan elites and into the sparkling realm of Hollywood.

Despite the illicit nature of their relationship, the pair weren’t exactly discreet.

John HustonUnknown photographer, published by National Board of Review, Wikimedia Commons

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14. She Was A Passionate Lover

Marietta and Huston flung themselves full force into their relationship, with both of them ignoring their familial bonds—including Marietta’s still-young daughter Frances—to indulge their pleasure. Apparently, they once were together so, well, furiously, that they broke a friend’s bed. Yet it wasn’t all lust.

File:John Huston and Angelica.JPGUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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15. She Was A Man-Eater

John Huston was rarely a man to stay put when it came to women, but Marietta seemed to capture him body and soul. Rumors around the time indicated that he was “head over heels” for the socialite. For her part, Marietta seemed to encourage this, and they even discussed marriage—but Huston was about to find out that his lover was more fickle than him.

Gettyimages - 	1764365618, Claudette Colbert Receives Lord & Taylor's Rose Award Marietta Tree (foreground R) attends an event at the main branch of Lord & Taylor in New York City on November 16, 1983. WWD, Getty Images

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16. She Sent Her Lover Packing

At the end of WWII, Desmond FitzGerald finally came back to New York from his own war-time travels, and Marietta sent John Huston back to California, ostensibly so she and FitzGerald could discuss their divorce terms at last and she could keep carrying on with Huston. Yet FitzGerald didn’t seem so ready to let his wife go.

File:Manhattan 1931 sharpened.jpgof original work File:File:Manhattan_1931.jpg: UnknownUnknown derivative work: Meph666, Wikimedia Commons

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17. She Went On A Last-Ditch Trip

Shortly after FitzGerald’s return, he and Marietta took a trip to Barbados, staying with the wealthy politician Ronald Tree, grandson of retail magnate Marshall Fields, and his wife Nancy. It was seemingly a Hail Mary to save their relationship, and on the surface a stay at the Trees’ opulent estate was a fool-proof way to reconnect. Until it turned into a disaster.

Gettyimages - 	50424439, Henry Kissinger And Marietta Tree And David Rockefeller 1990: Banker David Rockefeller w. socialite Marietta Tree, followed by Henry Kissinger, as they leave Temple where William S. Paley funeral was conducted. Robin Platzer, Getty Images

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18. She Started Another Affair

As a wealthy, bisexual Anglo-American with ties to the British Parliament, Ronald Tree was immediately fascinating to Marietta. So, even though he was 20 years her senior—having almost a full decade on John Huston—Marietta used her time in Barbados to start an affair with her wealthy, urbane host. It was a breaking point.

File:Ronald Tree.jpgBassano Ltd (active 1901-1962), Wikimedia Commons

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19. She Made Scandalous Plans

In the face of Ronald Tree’s many assets—in every sense of the world—poor John Huston paled in comparison. Marietta appeared to all but forget the dashing director she had once broken beds with. Instead, she and Ronald Tree now plotted to divorce their spouses and marry each other. This time, they succeeded.

Gettyimages - 	2177965908, 'New Yorkers For New York' Benefit American socialite Marietta Peabody Tree (1917 - 1991) and guest attend a 'New Yorkers for New York' benefit at the Waldorf Hotel, New York, New York, February 18, 1988. Ron Galella, Getty Images

20. She Got What She Wanted

Evidently giving up the ghost, FitzGerald finally complied with the split and he and Marietta officially divorced in 1947. Tree did the same with his wife Nancy, and he and Marietta married soon after, in the same summer her divorce went through.

Except it wasn’t quite the society wedding Marietta might have hoped for.

Gettyimages - 	517824218, Marietta Tree Signing Papers at Desk (Original Caption) New York City: Mrs. Marietta Tree, U.S. Representative on the U.S. Trusteeship Council with personal rank of ambassador is shown seated at her desk. Bettmann, Getty Images

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21. Her Family Condemned Her

When Marietta told her parents the news of her upcoming divorce (and upcoming nuptials), their reaction was pure rage. The Peabodys didn’t have divorces, and they condemned Marietta’s loose choices in her life.

All the same, Marietta pressed on, even though it meant driving a wedge between herself and her family. Besides, she had consolations.

Gettyimages - 	520852374, 14th Annual New York Awards NEW YORK CITY - FEBRUARY 14: Marietta Peabody Tree attends 14th Annual New York Awards on February 14, 1989 at the Waldorf Hotel in New York City. Ron Galella, Getty Images

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22. She Was The Mistress Of A Historical Estate

Ronald Tree’s home was the Ditchley Park estate in the English countryside, a magnificent pile that had hosted the likes of Winston Churchill and his wife Clementine—in fact, the home had been a hideout for Churchill in the depths of WWII. Marietta intended to settle herself into these illustrious surroundings and become the best English society wife she could be.

The trouble was, Marietta didn’t have great follow-through.

File:Sir Winston Churchill - 19086236948.jpgYousuf Karsh, Wikimedia Commons

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23. She Regretted Her Choices

Once the dust settled on her second marriage, Marietta Peabody Tree realized she had made the same mistake. Like Desmond FitzGerald, Ronald Tree was a staunch conservative, as was most of his social set, and once more Marietta found her liberal beliefs marked her as the odd man out, no matter how opulent the gathering. It wasn’t the only thing she grappled with.

  Gettyimages - 1429308101, William S. Paley Party for Frank Sinatra Marietta Tree attends a home at the New York City residence of William S. Paley on April 19, 1979. WWD, Getty Images

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24. She Had Another Child

In 1949, Marietta Peabody Tree gave birth to her second child, another daughter they named Penelope, and who would eventually grow into the It model of the 1960s. Yet despite this apparent omen of domestic bliss, Marietta was deeply unhappy: Conservative social circle aside, she was now bored to tears by the quiet English countryside life at Ditchley, and in desperate need of a change of scenery. She got it.

Gettyimages - 	845792344, Marietta Tree With Doughter Penelope At Truman Capote BW Ball NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 28: Marietta Tree with doughter Penelope at Truman Capote BW Ball on November 28, 1966 in New York, New York.  Santi Visalli, Getty Images

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25. She Came Back To New York

Ronald Tree could see that his young wife was chomping at the bit at Ditchley and, besides that, new taxation laws in England were eating away at his inheritance funds. With little encouragement, then, Tree sold Ditchley and left for New York with Marietta, Penelope, and a butler in tow. Yet everywhere you go, there you are.

File:Ditchley House, Charlbury in Oxfordshire, England.pngWentwort12, Wikimedia Commons

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26. She Was A “Career Wife”

Later, Marietta Peabody Tree would speak with bittersweet perspective about her time being a “career wife” to Ronald Tree, which contained as much disappointment as it did glamour. Once, she detailed how, after she and Tree had to spend August in Albany working in politics—“the month we usually went to Florence”—her husband sat her down at the end of the month and told her “don’t let this happen again”.

Perhaps it’s no wonder, then, that she was ravenous for something else.

Gettyimages - 1429666727, Lillian Hellman Dinner at Lord & Taylor (L-R) Marietta Tree, Patricia Neal, and Jerry Zipkin attend a dinner inside a Lord & Taylor store in New York City on October 9, 1977.  WWD, Getty Images

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27. She Got Deeper Into Politics

Being back in New York reawakened something in Marietta Peabody Tree, and soon she was using Ronald Tree’s significant funds to establish a salon in the city where she could circulate with some of the East Coast’s best and brightest socialites and politicians—particularly of the Democratic bent. Like so much she did, Marietta’s pet project soon turned scandalous.

Gettyimages - 	1429134929, WWD, Getty Images

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28. She Met A Powerful Man

Marietta Peabody Tree was now smack dab in the middle of American politics, and she became an especially passionate supporter of the Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson, who himself was the grandson of the 23rd vice president of the US. With his sterling pedigree and experience in politics, many people backed Stevenson—but none were as…passionate as Marietta.

File:Stevenson and Korean officials at USAF base in Korea, March 1953.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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29. She Snuck Around

In 1952—the very year of the presidential election—Marietta and Stevenson launched into an affair together. As usual, Marietta was committed to keeping up a respectable facade for the rest of the world, and the couple came up with the code names Mr and Mrs Johnson or Mr and Mrs Richardson for each other, and would meet at friends’ houses to conduct their business in secret. It didn’t change Stevenson’s fate.

StevensonIllinois Digital Archives - Illinois State Library, Office of the Illinois Secretary of State, Wikimedia Commons

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30. Her Lover Lost It

In the end, the tryst between Marietta Peabody Tree and the would-be president was kept top secret, but it was hardly a good luck charm. When the votes rolled in on election day, the results were crushing. Stevenson lost by a landslide to the Republican candidate Dwight Eisenhower. Nonetheless, they carried on. They even had help.

Gettyimages - 	517761046, Marietta Tree During Her Swearing in Ceremony Bettmann, Getty Images

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31. She Had An Open Marriage

Perhaps thanks to his bisexuality, Marietta’s husband Ronald Tree was relatively even-keeled about the affair, which he was aware of, and even invited Stevenson to stay with them from time to time. By then, in any case, the Trees were largely but amicably estranged, and would become even more so as the years went on. But not everything was so rosy.

File:AdlaiEStevenson1900-1965.jpgWarren K. Leffler., Wikimedia Commons

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32. Her Lover Liked To Make Her Jealous

Stevenson was an inveterate ladies’ man before he and Marietta Peabody Tree met, and he didn’t change his habits after they started their tryst. The politician particularly liked to exchange love letters with his various women, and he would keep the notes in his bedside table even with Marietta there. More than that, he also liked to prod at Marietta’s jealousy by telling her about his pursuits.

File:Adlai Stevenson (1).jpgUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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33. She Watched Him Lose Again

In 1956, Marietta Peabody Tree and Adlai Stevenson were still going strong, albeit behind closed doors, and Stevenson was once more running against Eisenhower for the Oval Office. Well, heartbreak struck twice: Eisenhower defeated Stevenson in another landslide victory, shutting down his hopes for the Presidential office once and for all. Which is about when things went sideways for their love, too.

File:Eisenhower official.jpgWhite House, Wikimedia Commons

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34. He Drifted From Her

After his second crushing defeat, Marietta and Stevenson stayed in touch, but Stevenson’s eyes seemed to wander more than ever. He also had something of a type—powerful women in politics—and his dalliances were with dynamos like philanthropist Mary Lasker, publisher Alicia Patterson Guggenheim, and socialite Brooke Astor, to whom he even proposed.

You can be sure, though, that Marietta wasn’t crying into her pillow every night.

Gettyimages - 	1032599362, Brooke Astor American socialite and philanthropist Brooke Astor (1902-2007), widow of Vincent Astor, pictured in front of the door of a house on 19th April 1963.  Express, Getty Images

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35. Her Ex Came Back

Around this time, an old ghost walked into the life of Marietta Peabody Tree. Director John Huston contacted her once more, asking her to be a part of his upcoming film The Misfits, starring Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, and Montgomery Clift. His motives weren’t pure, either: According to friends, Marietta was still the only woman Huston had ever loved, likely because she was the one who left him.

Well, Marietta both disappointed and delighted him.

File:Marilyn Monroe Misfits.jpgMacfadden Publications New York, publisher of Radio-TV Mirror, Wikimedia Commons

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36. She Acted Alongside Marilyn Monroe

Despite his continued ardor over her, Marietta turned down a second go with Huston, but she did say yes to a part in the movie. Not that she was particularly grateful about it: After seeing herself on the big screen, she said, “I was simply horrible”. Besides a part in the 1988 movie Mr North, directed by John Huston’s son Danny, she never acted in a film again.

Then in 1961, Marietta got some good news at last:

File:Marilyn Monroe 1953 crop 2.jpgLos Angeles Times, Wikimedia Commons

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37. She Got A Big Promotion

When John F Kennedy became President, there was finally a Democrat in the White House. More than that, it led directly to a promotion for Marietta Peabody Tree: Kennedy named her the US representative to the UN’s Commission on Human Rights, a position that enabled her to work directly under her (continuing) lover Adlai Stevenson, who was the head of the American delegation.

Yet it wasn’t the dream position it might seem.

  Gettyimages - 	517824020, Marietta Tree Conversing with A.M. Foum (Original Caption) New York City: Mrs. Marietta Tree, U.S. Representative on the U.S. Trusteeship Council with personal rank of ambassador is shown a meeting of the UN Economic and Social Council. Bettmann, Getty Images

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38. She Thought Kennedy Was Shallow

Although Marietta had an ally in Kennedy, she had harsh words about him. Speaking of him later, she criticized Kennedy for his dismissive views on women—for although he “enjoyed them and was extremely interested in them,” she said, “he simply enjoyed their beauty and charms without particularly their intellectual…counsel”.

Nonetheless, Marietta worked in the UN role until 1964—which meant she had a front seat to national tragedy.

File:President Kennedy addresses nation on Civil Rights, 11 June 1963.jpgAbbie Rowe, Wikimedia Commons

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39. She Didn’t Believe The News

When Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, Marietta’s reaction was telling. She was in the middle of a delegate lunch when her daughter Penelope came down stairs and said, “I’ve just heard on the radio that the President has been shot”. But Marietta Peabody Tree, whose whole life was putting on a brave face, couldn’t even countenance the news.

“I quite blocked it out,” she remembered. So much so that she went and had the lunch anyway before realizing the truth. Even when it did hit, she only became more “Marietta”.

File:JFK Motorcade GettyImages-517330536.jpgWalt Cisco, Dallas Morning News, Wikimedia Commons

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40. She Was Good In A Crisis

Marietta admitted she was “predominantly [in] shock” at Kennedy’s funeral, but this didn’t stop her from taking control. The UN delegates arrived dressed in rented morning coats and stiff collars, and the get-up of one of them in particular, diplomat U Thant, was especially ill-fitted, with his collar climbing up his neck. She recalled, “as part of my duties…I kept pushing the collar down—like a governess—all during the day”.

But she could hardly be so stoic about the next tragedy.

Gettyimages - 	517827996, United States Mission Worker Marietta Tree at Her Desk 10/24/1963-New York City: Portrait of Mrs. Marietta Tree seated at her desk in her office at the U.S. Mission. Bettmann, Getty Images

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41. She Lost Her Great Love

In 1965, despite their detours away from each other, Marietta Peabody Tree and Adlai Stevenson were still seeing each other regularly. Then tragedy struck. One July day while they were walking in London, Stevenson suffered a massive and ultimately fatal heart attack, perishing that day at the age of 65. His last moments haunted Marietta forever.

File:Adlai Stevenson 1952.jpgU.S. News & World Report Magazine photographer Thomas J. O'Halloran, Wikimedia Commons

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42. She Watched A Man Die

Thinking of Stevenson's final seconds with her, Marietta recalled that she had been walking briskly ahead of the politician to get to the park when he called out to her to stop walking so fast. When she turned around, “he’d gone white, gray really” before falling onto the pavement, his hand brushing hers as he tumbled.

In her diary that night, she wrote simply and heartbreakingly: “Adlai is dead. We were together”.

File:Portrait of Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson II.jpgLouis Fabian Bachrach, Jr., Wikimedia Commons

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43. Her Life Was In Tatters

Stevenson’s sudden end sent a shock through Marietta’s entire life—and when she looked around and took stock, all she could feel was alarm. She and Ronald Tree were estranged, yes, but more than that, her relationship with her daughters Frances and Penelope, never close, had become frigid as the girls grew up.

She felt at sea, and loss wasn’t done with her yet.

Gettyimages - 	1766799830, Sonia Moskowitz, Getty Images

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44. She Became A Widow

Ronald Tree and Marietta Peabody Tree had long stopped being romantic partners, but they always maintained an affection for each other. So Marietta was heartbroken when, in 1976, Tree had a stroke and perished, leaving her well and truly alone for the first time in decades. To add insult to injury, Tree passed on July 14, the exact same day as Stevenson had a decade earlier.

There was more bad news.

Gettyimages - 	520852330, 14th Annual New York Awards NEW YORK CITY - FEBRUARY 14: Marietta Peabody Tree attends 14th Annual New York Awards on February 14, 1989 at the Waldorf Hotel in New York City.  Ron Galella, Getty Images

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45. She Had To Sell Her Assets

Ronald Tree’s fortune had steadily declined over the years, and after his passing Marietta was forced to sell off much of their property to stay afloat. Perhaps more painfully, she had to cut back on the endless rounds of parties and openings she usually attended and retreat into an insufferably quiet life.

Still, Marietta Peabody Tree always knew how to survive, and she wasn’t held back for long.

Gettyimages - 1429136327, WWD, Getty Images

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46. She Found A New Scandalous Love Interest

Only just hitting her 60s when she became a widow, Marietta Peabody Tree was still an intensely attractive woman, and now that she was single she had more suitors than she could handle. But Marietta always did make the same mistakes. Though she could have had almost anyone, she chose the married English architect Richard Llewelyn Davies as her next beau.

It couldn’t end well, and it didn’t.

Gettyimages - 	585336459, Norman Reid And Lord Llewelyn-Davies Sir Norman Reid (right), Director of the Tate Gallery, and Lord Richard Llewelyn-Davies, the architect of the new galley extension scheme, inspecting a model of the new proposed extension for the Tate Gallery at a press conference, London, March 18th 1971. William Vanderson, Getty Images

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47. She Lost Everything Again

For years, Marietta and Davies were joined at the hip, and Marietta Peabody Tree even helped to finance Davies’ business, likely in the hope that he would leave his wife and make an honest woman out of her. Instead, she got news that took her breath away: He, too, perished suddenly a handful of years into their liaison, leaving her with more debts to take care of.

But if it was karma coming for Marietta, she wasn’t interested.

Gettyimages - 	1127760372, Tate Development British architect Richard Llewelyn-Davies (1912 - 1981) showing a prototype of his planned extension of the Tate Britain to British solicitor, artist and Arts administrator Anthony Baruh Lousada (1907 - 1994) and British arts administrator and Tate assistant director Norman Reid (1915 - 2007), UK, 6th February 1969.  Evening Standard, Getty Images

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48. She Still Had It

After Davies’ passing, Marietta Peabody Tree supported herself by calling in investments and working on the boards of various powerful companies, among them CBS and Pan Am. It launched her once more into the world of the very rich, and she spent her later years in the 1980s flashing about with the nouveau riche Trumps and Steinbergs.

But what goes up must come down.

Gettyimages - 	155535025, Ron Galella Archive - File Photos 2009 Socialites Susan Gutfreund and Marietta Tree attend The Citizens Community for New York New Yorker for New York Gala on February 18, 1988 at the Waldorf Hotel in New York City. Ron Galella, Getty Images

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49. She Fought Until The End

When Marietta Peabody Tree was 72, she hit the final bad break of her career: Doctors diagnosed her with breast cancer. A force of nature as ever, she clung on for a couple more years before passing at the age of 74 in 1991.

But there’s one secret about the “Golden Girl of the Democratic Party” that people tend to forget.

Gettyimages  -	1437220008, Party for Aileen Mehle AKA WWD, Getty Images

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50. She Wasn’t A Feminist

For all her success in the male-dominated world of politics, and for all her liberal values, Marietta Peabody Tree never quite left her identity as a “career wife”. When the feminist movement surged in the 1960s, she staunchly refused to support it, and even refused to sign three resolutions surrounding women’s rights. Golden Girl indeed.

Gettyimages - 1438504547, WWD, Getty Images

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Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11


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