Rita de Acosta was married twice. Her first marriage was on January 3, 1895, when the 20-year-old became the first wife of multimillionaire
William Earl Dodge Stokes (1852–1926), who built
The Ansonia on Manhattan's
Upper West Side. The marriage was unhappy, reportedly due to Stokes's temper and physical cruelty, and when it was dissolved by divorce in 1900, she received a settlement of nearly two million dollars, a record for the time. In February 1922, she testified in court against Stokes, then going through an acrimonious divorce from his second wife, stating that he used to beat her during their marriage. Before their divorce, they lived at 262
West 72nd Street and became the parents of one son, William Earl Dodge Stokes Jr. (1896–1982). In 1902, she married Major Philip Mesier Lydig, a wealthy and socially prominent retired officer in the
United States Army, in Grace Church
chantry by the Rev. William R. Houghton. In 1913, she sold her art collection, which included pieces by
Sandro Botticelli. They separated in 1914 and divorced in 1919. In 1921, Lydig announced her engagement to
Reverend Percy Stickney Grant (1860–1927), rector of the
Church of the Ascension. Their wedding plans were broken off in 1924 when Bishop
William Manning refused to authorize the marriage, citing Lydig being a divorcée with two living former husbands. Rev. Grant died shortly afterwards, leaving his personal fortune to the woman he had hoped to marry, and Lydig spent large sums of money on fashion, art, furniture, and other objects to overcome her grief. She was buried with her mother and, later, her sister Mercedes at
Trinity Church Cemetery in lower Manhattan,
New York City.
Legacy Her personal wardrobe became the basis for the start of the
Costume Institute at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. ==References==