Her husband accepted the position of
Viceroy of India and was elevated to the
Peerage of Ireland as Baron Curzon of Kedleston in the summer of 1898 at age thirty-nine. As Vicereine of India, his wife held the highest official title in the Indian Empire that a woman could hold, as did Lady Wellesley, also an American wife of a prominent British man. In 1902 Lord Curzon organized the
Delhi Durbar to celebrate the coronation of
Edward VII, "
the grandest pageant in history", which created a tremendous sensation. At the state ball Mary wore an extravagant coronation gown, by the
House of Worth of
Paris, known as
Lady Curzon's peacock dress, stitched of gold cloth embroidered with peacock feathers with a blue/green beetle wing in each eye, which many mistook for emeralds, tapping into their own fantasies about the wealth of millionaire heiresses, Indian potentates and European royalty. The skirt was trimmed with white roses and the bodice with lace. She wore a huge diamond necklace and a large brooch of diamonds and pearls. She wore a tiara crown with a pearl tipping each of its high diamond points. It was reported that as she walked through the hall the crowd was breathless. This dress is now on display at the Curzon estate,
Kedleston Hall. Lady Curzon contributed to the design of the exquisitely rich and beautiful coronation robe of
Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom, made from gold fabric woven and embroidered in the same factory in
Chandni Chauk Delhi where she ordered all the materials for her own state gowns. The factory owner said that she had the rarest taste of any woman he knew, and that she was the best dressed woman in the world—an opinion shared by others. Lady Curzon was an invaluable commercial agent for the manufacturers of the higher class of fabrics and art objects in India. She wore Indian fabrics, and as a result many of them became fashionable in Calcutta and other Indian cities as well as in London, Paris, and the capitals of Europe. She placed orders for her friends and strangers. She assisted the silk weavers, embroiderers, and other artists to adapt their designs, patterns, and fabrics to the requirements of modern fashions. She kept several of the best artists in India busy with orders and soon saw the results of her efforts, reviving skilled arts that almost had been forgotten. Lady Curzon was tutored in
Urdu by the
Mohyal patriarch Bakhshi Ram Dass Chhibber. Progressive medical reforms were initiated by English women in India under the leadership of the
Marchioness of Dufferin and Lady Curzon by supplying women doctors and hospitals for women. There is a Lady Curzon Hospital in
Bangalore, shown to the right.
William Eleroy Curtis, Chicago journalist and author, dedicated his book
Modern India thus: "To Lady Curzon, An ideal American woman". On 4 November 1902 Lady Curzon wrote from Viceroy's Camp, Simla, to
Lady Randolph Churchill advising her on the appropriate headgear to wear in Delhi, saying that she is looking forward to seeing her and that she will not need an ayah in addition to her maid. In 1903 she sailed on a yacht from
Karachi for a tour of the
Persian Gulf with Lord Curzon,
Ignatius Valentine Chirol, young
Winston Churchill and other notable guests. In 1904, Lady Curzon traveled by train with Lord Curzon to
Dhaka and toured the
Shahbagh area in a fleet of Dechamp Tonneau-model 1902 automobiles. Lady Curzon learned about the
great one-horned rhinoceroses of Kaziranga from her tea-plantation friends and wanted to see them. In the winter of 1904 she visited the Kaziranga area, and saw some of their
hoof marks, but was disappointed by not having seen a single rhinoceros. It was reported that the noted
Assamese animal tracker,
Balaram Hazarika, showed Lady Curzon around Kaziranga and impressed upon her the urgent need for its
conservation. Concerned about the dwindling numbers of rhinoceros, she asked her husband to take the necessary action to save the rhinoceros, which he did. The Kaziranga Proposed
Reserve Forest thus was created. Later it was developed into the
Kaziranga National Park. == Private life ==