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1794 Matilda in silks, diamonds, pearls, & snowflake piochas (hairpins) |
At age 16, in 1794, Matilda
Stoughton was the dutiful daughter and married a man of great prospects; or so
it was thought at the time. Officially
recognizing the United States government under George Washington in
Philadelphia, Charles IV of Spain sent an ambassador with two trade attachés,
one of which was Josef de Jaudenes y Nebot.
The two trade attachés carried on negotiations with regard to Spanish
Louisiana, navigation on the Mississippi river, trade with Cuba, amongst other
issues. [Spanish and U.S.
negotiators concluded the Treaty of San Lorenzo, also known as Pinckney’s
Treaty, on October 27, 1795. The treaty was an important diplomatic success for
the United States. It resolved territorial disputes between the two countries
and granted American ships the right to free navigation of the Mississippi
River as well as duty-free transport through the port of New Orleans, then
under Spanish control. Prior to the treaty, the western and southern borders of
the United States had been a source of tension between Spain and the United
States.]
Marrying the Spanish Consul’s daughter
allowed Josef de Jaudenes y Nebot to stay in the United States where he surely
happily envisioned being able to stay as a permanently ensconced envoy of Spain
(like his father-in-law). But by 1796,
charged with corruption, he was sent back home where he returned to his family’s
ancestral estate, a vineyard near Palma, Majorca. Matilda had surely imagined a more illustrious outcome of the
marriage. But at least the two had
their Stuart portraits which were commissioned for the occasion of their
wedding. Which is why the two are
remembered today.
FROM LAWRENCE
PARK
Louisa
Carolina Matilda Stoughton was the second daughter of Don Juan (John) Stoughton
who, for thirty years previous to his death in 1820 in his 76th
year, was the Spanish Consul in Boston.
He was prominent in the establishment of the first Roman Catholic
Cathedral in the United States, erected in Boston. Esther Fletcher, whose death
in 1789 is noticed in a contemporary Boston newspaper, and who was the mother
of his daughter Louisa, was either Stoughton’s first or second wife. Louisa Carolina Matilda was well known in
Boston, in her youth, for her beauty.
In 1794 she married Don Josef de Jaudenes y Nebot.
New York,
1794. ....Her dress is of white flowered silk, finished at the neck with a
dainty fichu edged with lace. Her
luxuriant hair is powdered and a coronet-shaped headdress with two tall
feathers is set on top of her head in the center. Nestling in her hair, at the base of the headdress, are clusters
of jewels. Jewels are in her ears,
around her neck, on her dress, and at her wrists. By her side is a table, with a red velevet cover, on which are
two leather-bound books, one open as though she had been reading. Her hands are in her lap and she holds a
closed fan. A brownish-pink curtain is
draped in the background, showing clouds and a sky of blue and pink at the
right. In the upper left-hand corner under a coat of arms is the following
inscription: “Dona Matilde Stoughton de Jaudenes-Esposa de Don Josef de
Jaudenes y Nebot Comisario Ordenador de Los Reales Exercitos de Su Magestad Catholica
y su Ministro Embiado cerca de los Estados Unidos de America. Nacio en la Ciudad de Nueva-York en los Estados Unidos el 11 de Enero de
1778.”
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The two were married in New York, and there Josef
commissioned their two portraits to be done by Stuart. Was he in love, or did he only wish to
advance his career? “Scholars have described him as a “dandy and spendthrift,” a “swarthy Spanish
provocateur,” “arrogant,” “slippery,” “shifty,” and even “cruel.”
(From the Met book Gilbert Stuart [from Albert Ten Eyck Gardner, “Fragment of a Lost Monument,” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, n.s.6 March 1948, p 190] p 125),