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Mary (Sarah) Ann (Brown) Angell

2023.10.434

Sarah Ann Angell (born Sarah Ann Brown) was a Michigan resident who made national headlines in the 1890s by filing a sensational lawsuit claiming she was the lawful, first wife of the late railroad tycoon Jay Gould. In 1896, several years after Gould’s death in 1892, Sarah Ann filed a legal action in the New York Supreme Court to secure a dower right in the multi-million dollar Gould estate. She claimed that she and a 16-year-old Jay Gould had eloped and were married in Champlain, New York, in 1853. Gould's legal heirs and estate executors fiercely contested her claims, producing depositions—such as one from former Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice John W. Champlin—that highlighted the improbability of the 1853 marriage story. Ultimately, the New York courts threw her lawsuit out. In early 1899, after public trials and investigations into alleged conspiracies surrounding the case, her efforts to claim the Gould fortune failed completely.

Winthers, Sally

2023.10

Found in Collection

Digital data in CatalogIt

This information was copied from the pre-2023 SDHC website. The location of an original version was unknown at the time of cataloging.

05/26/2026

05/26/2026