The sugar plantations of the Caribbean generated vast wealth not only for men, but women also
'A must-read.' Paterson Joseph, author of The Secret Diaries of Charles Ignatius Sancho
This money enabled heiresses to marry into the top tiers of the aristocracy, construct lavish country homes, commission the eras greatest artists and influence the nations politics. Their banquets, dresses and dowries all funded by the exploitation of enslaved men, women and children.
Following the lives of nine heiresses, Miranda Kaufmann peers beneath the demure, empire-waisted image of the Georgian heiress to reveal a murky world of inheritance, fortune-hunting and human exploitation.
From Jane Leigh Perrot, Jane Austens light-fingered aunt, to Elizabeth Vassall Fox, who faked her daughters death to maintain custody, Heiresses traces the often scandalous lives of the women who made Britain rich. Kaufmann also unearths the stories of the people the heiresses enslaved, whose labour funded their lifestyles with whom their fates were intimately intertwined.