Gloucester died on August 9, 1883, of pneumonia. She was interred at
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. In her obituary,
The Brooklyn Eagle wrote, "She came to be known to every one in Brooklyn, New York, the State and in fact throughout a great part of the country." At the time of her death, Gloucester's properties were worth about $300,000 ($10 million today), making her perhaps the wealthiest Black woman in America at the time. Newspapers called her "the remarkable colored woman." She had six children: Emma, Stephen, Elizabeth, Eloise, Charles and Adelaide. == References ==