(16. - 1305) The Lace Widow by Mollie Ann Cox - Eliza Hamilton, the wife of Alexander Hamilton, has been a widow for 10 days in July of 1804.
She is determined to have Aaron Burr shunned in New York City and charged with the murder of her husband. She is convinced Burr murdered her husband in their duel. She will not have Hamilton’s legacy be that he died in an ordinary duel.
Eliza’s carriage is suddenly stopped on its way from Manhattan to the family home in Harlem. A body is hauled from the river. It is John Van Der Gloss who acted as second for her husband. She instantly thinks he has been murdered to prevent him from saying what happened during the duel.
Eliza is usually greeted as “Mrs. General Hamilton” reflecting the status of her father, Philip Schuyler, as an American general.
Eliza had been a founding member of the Widows Society who aided widows with financial troubles. She is worried she may face such troubles. Eliza is uneasy about the financial security of herself and her eight living children for she did not know her husband’s finances.
Eliza is stunned when her 18 year old son, Alexander Jr., is arrested for killing Van Der Gloss. At a tavern earlier in the evening they had argued over the duel and Alexander struck Van Der Gloss. Alexander insists it was but one blow and no more.
She is determined to find out who actually killed Van Der Gloss. A strong willed woman, Eliza bristles when told the investigation into the murder is “man’s business”. She will accept help but saving her son is her business.
Alice Rhodes, a beneficiary of the Widows Society, who has taken up lace making offers to ask questions for Eliza. As a woman of a certain age and modest standing in society, Alice is almost invisible.
Eliza can ask questions at upscale establishments such as hotels.
She recruits other women to ask questions.
She will stir the pot.
Several widows who were aided by the Widows Society are now living together in a house and making their own way in the world through weaving and lace making. They are not looking for “good marriages”.
Eliza’s lawyer bluntly tells her that she has little money and must economize.
Burr’s lawyer, Jonathan Drake, may be involved. Some refer to him derisively as Burr’s dog.
It is hard for Eliza, personally known by many as Hamilton’s widow, to be inconspicuous.
Eliza pushes forward. She is uneasy but has the classic trait of a sleuth. She is persistent, even obsessive, in solving murder.
Anger builds in Eliza over Hamilton not providing for her before he went off to duel.
Eliza’s grief has been complicated by her investigation, her financial circumstances and her relationship with her late husband. She puts aside mourning.
Women of America’s upper class of the era were trained to make lace. Eliza, while long out of practice, finds she still has the skill to make lace.
Eliza pushes the investigation in a personal manner I would never have expected. She dared convention in her effort to clear her son’s name and find justice for the murdered.
It is an interesting book. I am not sure if I will read another in the series.





