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The Impostor Heiress

Cassie Chadwick, the Greatest Grifter of the Gilded Age

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

Paroled felon. Rich doctor's wife. Famous clairvoyant. Cassie Chadwick, one of history's most successful con artists, was a master of reinvention. In the dusk of the Gilded Age, she swept from town to town, assuming fresh identities to swindle a fortune so large that it rivaled the robber barons of the time.

Then came arguably the greatest con in American history. Using forged documents and her peerless wits, Cassie convinced prominent men from Cleveland to New York City that she was the illegitimate daughter of the world's wealthiest man—Andrew Carnegie. 

Businessmen loaned her hundreds of thousands of dollars at a time; the ensuing crash shattered banks and bankers alike. Her sensational trial made her a household name. The newspapers called her the "Queen of Swindlers," the "Duchess of Diamonds," the "High Priestess of Fraudulent Finance." 

Interspersing Cassie's crimes with stories of an unsuspecting Andrew Carnegie, author Annie Reed spins an enthralling, page-turning tale of true crime. Long before Anna Delvey captivated national attention, there was Cassie Chadwick—the mother of the American con. 

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 15, 2024
      Glamorous con artist Cassie Chadwick (1857–1907) poses as the heir of industrialist Andrew Carnegie in historian Reed’s juicy first book. Born Elizabeth Bigley in a small Canadian farming community, at a young age she became obsessed with the trappings of wealth and began running small scams; as a teenager, she posed as an heiress who had not yet come into her inheritance, handing out forged promissory notes from respectable people as proof. After getting caught for this scam in her hometown (but being exonerated by a bemused jury), she moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where she adopted the name Cassie and refined her craft, cycling through numerous smaller scams (including soothsaying) and several well-heeled marriages. Chadwick (a name taken from her third husband) “had a knack of drawing men into her web and holding them fast,” writes Reed; eventually, she used this gift to “reveal” to gullible bankers that, as Carnegie’s illegitimate daughter, she stood to inherit $400 million, but couldn’t access the funds yet. Chadwick lived lavishly off this lie for 14 years, taking out new loans to pay off old ones, all backed by forged promissory notes; the scheme collapsed in 1904, taking several prominent bankers with it (“Ponzi is a piker compared to Cassie,” read one headline) and resulting in Chadwick’s imprisonment. Narrated in stylish prose with the galloping pace of a thriller, this charms.

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