Having enjoyed life as a duchess, Jane was determined to get her daughters well married, and she set out securing suitable husbands for them. Jane first turned to finding a husband for
Charlotte (1768–1842), her eldest daughter. She plotted to have her marry
William Pitt, the Prime Minister, but her plan failed when Pitt's close friend, Lord
Henry Dundas, took an interest in Charlotte. Neither potential husband worked out, and Charlotte later married Colonel Charles Lennox, the future
4th Duke of Richmond, on 9 September 1789 at
Gordon Castle. In 1802, after the
Peace of Amiens, she took her youngest daughter, Georgiana (1781–1853), to Paris with a view to marrying her to the son of the
Empress Joséphine,
Eugène de Beauharnais. This would not have been popular so soon after hostilities, but nothing came of it. A short time later, Georgiana was reputed to be friendly, if not engaged, to
Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford, but he died before they could marry. Jane then arranged a meeting with the Duke's younger brother
John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford, who had inherited the title and recently been widowed with several children. All went as planned, and he soon married his late brother's fiancée on 23 June 1803 in
London. Georgiana had ten children by the Duke, and she followed in her mother's partying footsteps, entertaining frequently in her Bedford home,
Woburn Abbey. The Duchess of Bedford was a great patroness of the arts, and had a long-standing relationship with the painter Sir
Edwin Henry Landseer. (1835). It was said that Rachel was the daughter of Jane's daughter Georgiana and Edwin Henry Landseer.
General Cornwallis had returned to England from his disastrous command of the British troops during the
American Revolution to be, rather surprisingly, treated as a hero and created a marquess. Having fought with Jane's brother at
Plassey in India as well as in the American war, he would have been friendly with Jane; thus, his eldest son,
Lord Brome, was considered suitable as a husband for Louisa (1776–1850), the fourth daughter. Cornwallis refused to approve the marriage, however, citing madness in the Gordon family. The Duchess allayed his fears by swearing that there was "not one drop of Gordon blood" in this particular daughter. The marriage then proceeded on 17 April 1795 in
London. History does not relate who Louisa's natural father was, but it is thought to have been Captain Fraser, her early love from Edinburgh.
Susan (1774–1828), the third daughter, was married on 7 October 1793 in
Edinburgh to
William Montagu, 5th Duke of Manchester, and Madeleine (1772–1847), the second daughter, married firstly on 2 April 1789 in
London to Sir Robert Sinclair, 7th Baronet. On 25 November 1805 she married secondly at
Kimbolton Castle to Charles Fysche Palmer. ==End of her marriage==