, 1894 In the early 1880s, Carrie met and fell in love with
Marshall Orme Wilson (1860–1926), although her family disapproved of him and his family. a banker from
Loudon, Tennessee who had served the Commissary-General of the
Confederacy and became rich investing in railways (leading to claims of war profiteering). Wilson and his siblings were known in New York and Newport society as the "Marrying Wilsons" due to their marriages into the wealthiest and most prominent families. His sister
Grace married
Cornelius Vanderbilt III, and his brother,
Richard Jr. was married to Marion Steedman Mason, granddaughter of
Rear Admiral Charles Steedman of
Charleston, South Carolina, and great-granddaughter of the
U.S. Senator of New Hampshire,
Jeremiah Mason. Another sister, Belle, was married to Sir
Michael Henry Herbert (the
British Ambassador to the U.S. during
Theodore Roosevelt's presidency and brother to the
Earl of Pembroke), and
Mary, who married New York real estate heir
Ogden Goelet (parents of
Mary Goelet, who married the
Duke of Roxburghe). Reportedly, Carrie "starved herself into bulimia until her mother gave in and agreed to the marriage." On November 18, 1884, Carrie was married to Wilson at the Astor mansion. •
Marshall Orme Wilson Jr. (1885–1966), who was appointed
U.S. Ambassador to Haiti by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944. • Richard Thornton Wilson III (1886–1977), who married Harriet Appleton Post (1894–1969), a granddaughter of
George B. Post, in 1923. They divorced and he later became the third husband of Florence Magee Ellsworth (1902–1943) in 1942. Harriet married
Sumner Welles in 1952. Her husband died on April 1, 1926, in New York City, and he was buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery in the
Bronx. In his will, Carrie received their residence and all of its belongings, and their sons inherited the residual estate, including funds left by their paternal grandfather in trust for them. Carrie lived another twenty-two years and died on September 13, 1948, at the home of her son Richard, 1 Sutton Place (the former home of
Anne Harriman Vanderbilt). She was the last surviving child of her parents. After a funeral at
Trinity Church, she was buried alongside her husband at Woodlawn Cemetery. After her death, her former home was sold to the Indian Government to house their diplomats in New York for $500,000. ==In popular culture==