. In 1880, just after graduating college, he married Emelie (
née Askew) Dunn (1854–1921), the eldest daughter of Harriet J. (née Moore) Askew and Colonel William Franklin Askew of
Raleigh, North Carolina. From her first marriage to John K. Dunn, Emelie was the mother of Margaret "Daisy" Dunn (1875–1944), whom Emerson adopted. Daisy was married to J. Mitchell Horner and, later, James McVickar. Before their divorce in 1911, they were the parents of one child: •
Margaret Emerson (1884–1960), who married Dr. Smith Hollins McKim in 1902. They divorced in 1910 and in 1911 she married
Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt. She was widowed in 1915 when he died aboard the
RMS Lusitania. In 1918, she married
Raymond T. Baker, divorcing in 1928. Her last marriage was to Charles Minot Amory in 1928. After their divorce, Emelie married Charles Hazeltine Basshor in August 1912. and Emelie Basshor died in 1921. In 1911, he married his second wife, Anne McCormack (
née Preston). From this marriage, he gained a stepson and a stepdaughter: • Frederick C. McCormack • Ethel Preston McCormack, who married Francis Huger McAdoo, the eldest son of United States Treasury Secretary and U.S. Senator, William Gibbs McAdoo. She later married Walter Winchester Keith and Matthew James Looram. Captain Emerson and his wife, Anne, were widely known in American society and in the capitals of Europe. When Emerson's step-daughter, Ethel P. McCormack, married the son of
William Gibbs McAdoo, then
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, President
Woodrow Wilson attended the reception at the Emerson estate in
Brooklandwood, Maryland, off of Falls Road, north of the city. They were also known as lavish entertainers, maintaining two yachts for parties and world tours. They maintained estates at Brooklandwood and their villa
Whitehall at
Narragansett Pier in Rhode Island as well as in North and South Carolina where they entertained many social leaders of the Atlantic seaboard cities.
Estate Emerson died in 1931. His Will was filed for Probate in the New York Surrogate's Court on 30 January 1931; at the time of his death the size of his estate was speculated to be $20 million. The actual size of the estate was revealed in 1932, when newspaper reports of accounts submitted to the Records of Wills Office in Baltimore Country by Emerson's trustees confirmed that Emerson's estate was valued at $12,767,327. The estate assessed for $320,661.54 in Federal Estate Taxes and $1,193,618.72 in Maryland Estate Taxes. Consequently, when Emerson's second wife died in 1944, her two children from her first marriage, Ethel McCormack Looram and Frederick C. McCormack Jr each inherited a 17.75% interest in the Trust fund established under their stepfather's will. Emerson's stepson Frederick C. McCormack Jr died in 1948; litigation over the dispersal of his share of the Emerson Trust revealed that its value was approximately $5,600,000 in 1948, Emerson bequeathed his real estate in the Worthington Valley to his daughter Margaret for life, and thereafter to her son
Alfred, and his Southern shooting preserve
Arcadia to his grandson
George. ==References==