Burlington City, N.J.

Travel Info
Driving Directions
Lodging
Public Transportation

Historical Groups
Burlington County
Historical Society

City of Burlington
Historical Society

Colonial Burlington
Foundation

Historic Yorkshire
Alliance

Oliver Cromwell
Black History Society

Historic Figures
William R. Allen
William J. Allinson
James H. Birch
Joseph Bloomfield
Elias Boudinot
Susan Bradford
Marguerite V. Burton
Henry C. Carey
Cyrus Bustill
Isaac Collins
James Fenimore Cooper
Oliver Cromwell
The Jersey Devil
Benjamin Franklin
William Franklin
Stephen Grellet
John Gummere
Samuel R. Gummere
James Healy
Patrick Healy
James Kinsey
James Lawrence
Lydia Sherman
The 3 Richard Smiths
Garret Dorset Wall
James Walter Wall

Assorted History
Board of Island Managers
Council of Proprietors
The Friendly Institution
The Mantas Tribe
Old Burlington Laws
Purchase from the Lenape
The Quakers

Marguerite V. Burton

Marguerite Vivienne Burton was born about 1880, the daughter of two traveling performers. Wishing for her to have a stable home, her parents offered her for adoption, and she was taken in by the Thomansons, in-laws of the McNeals, owners of the U.S. Pipe Foundry. She spent her childhood in the family mansion, and told her schoolmates at St. Mary's Hall that she would someday be a countess.

In 1898, Marguerite met James H. Birch Jr., son of carriage mogul James Birch, on the train to Philadelphia. They married in 1904, but Burlington was too "small-town" for her, especially after she won a beauty contest run by a New York newspaper. After traveling in Europe, she married Baron Walter von Roedick, a German officer, in 1912, then became involved with a German diplomat's son, Count Christain Gunther von Bernstroff, and married him in 1917, causing quite an outrage back in the States - to say nothing of the Baron, who promptly challenged the Count to a duel.

After the war, Marguerite returned to Burlington, uncertain of the welcome she would receive. Her old friends greeted her warmly, and she became a part of American society once again, regaining assets that had been frozen by the government during the war. She moved to New York and went on to have three more husbands - coal magnate Arthur Wooly-Hart, Jams Askton, and New York Bell Vice-President Oscar M. Taylor - before she died at her Park Avenue home in 1981. Burton's half-dozen husbands doubled the mark set by Lydia Sherman, but as far as we know, Burton didn't poison any of hers.

Churches
Broad Street Methodist
Burlington Meeting House
New St. Mary's
Old St. Mary's
Temple B'nai Israel

Fire Companies
Endeavor #1
Hope #1
Young America #3
Mitchell #4
Neptune #5
Niagara #6

Other Historic Sites
Alcazar
Allen School
Bard-How House
Biddle-Pugh House
Birch-Bloomfield Mansion
Birch Opera House
Blue Anchor Inn
Boudinot-Bradford House
Burlington Island
Burlington Pharmacy
Carriage House
Coleman House
Collins-Jones House
Cooper House
Friends' Schoolhouse
Grant House
Grellet House
Grubb Estate
Hoskins House
Lawrence House
Library Company
Lyceum Hall
Dr. Pugh House
Railroads in Burlington
Revell House
Shippen House
Ship Shield Marker
Smith House

Last modified Monday, March 19, 2007 at 10:35 AM