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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1908)
TTIE STJT)AY OTtEGONIAN. PORTLAND. SEPTE3IBER 1908. who M0Wi El JAblKEE PRINCESSES DUCtt- SUPPED UNHAPPINESS SORROW AMD DISGFAC& s - 1 w , HES she weds the Duke of the Abruzzt. Miss Katherine Elkins, daughter of the opulent Senator from Wut Vlrglna, will Bit nearer to the throne of a great European monarchy than arry American girl who baa yet married a acton of old-world aristocracy. In the popular slang of the day. she might. In her probable future status, be termed a near-queen, tbe Duke being a member of the royal household of Italy, the first cousin of the King, the grand son of a Quten, and a possible heir to the throne. Only American Girl Knthroned. Another American girl, however, once actually won for herself a eat on one of the throres of Europe. This was Mlsa Helnie. daughter of Michael Heinze, a former banker of New Orleans, who mar ried Prince Albert, reigning aoverclgn of Monaco, and from whom she was Judi cially separated some years ago. She la the only American woman who ever oc cupied an old-world throne, . but she never bore the title of queen, and her throne waa a email one. her royal hus band's petty state extending little beyond the great gambling mecca of Monte Carlo. A dosen of our women have become princesses and 14 have become duchesses to date, but none of our princesses rank or ranked aa high as some of our duch sesi Thus neither Anna Gould, in her new role of Prince de Eagan. nor any of the other American women who have married French princes, are officially recognised In France as near-queens, their titles having disappeared after the French revolution. Husbands of other American princesses belong only to the "mediatised." or for merly reigning houses of Germany, whose thrones, crowns and scepters were con fiscated by Napoleon Bonaparte, although the Congress of Vienna, by way of a balm, allowed them to retain their empty rank and titles. Last and least are our American princesses, whose husbands bear itle In Slavic countries like Russia, where the rank of prince Is one of the least, being about equal to that of count or baron In other countries, and then In Italy titles may be purchased, there being two classes, those belonging to royalty and the -nobility, and those going with ancient estates, even when purchased by foreigners. But In Italy, as well as In some other continental European coun tries, one may be a duke and yet of higher rank than a prince of ancient line age. Yankee) Princess of Italy. Thus as the Duchess of the AbruazI, Miss Elklns would have far above three other American women who can. or could, boast of being Italian princesses. For example, there Is MJss Elizabeth Hlckson Field, of New York, who married Prince Salvator Brancaocto. whose title dates back -to 1391. and who also bears the Spanish title Duke of Lustra. This prince, who has been a model husband, was a prime favorite with King Humbert and an attache of his court while ttte Ameri can princess used to be lady-ln-waltlng to Queen Marghertta- Another American princess In Italy was Miss Josephine Mary Curtis, daughter of Joseph Davis Beers Curtis, of New York, who at Paris, In MSB. became the third wife of Dam Emanuel. Prince of Ruspoll and of Pog-glo-Suaea. an Italian deputy. In 1W8 the Italian Prince Camporeale. who was also Duke of Aldmgana, married a New York divorcee, Mrs. Thomas Klngsland, who had been Miss Florence Blnney, daughter of John Binney. of Burlington, N. J., In which city the American girl became the Princess Camporeale. This prince's family as far back aa the Mth century migrated from Bologna to Cicily, where they have since been established. Among the other early American prin cesses was Miss Evelyn Julia Bryant Mackay, stepdaughter of John TV. Mackay. who, at Paris, In 1W6, married Prince Colonna dl Galatro. a Spanish scapegrace, whose abuse and brutality caused her to leave him. and live after ward with her mother In I-ondon. keep ing her three children with her. About this time. Miss Clara, daughter of Col yA p. Huntington married Prince Hatz feldt of Germany, and Miss TVlnnaretta Singer, another American girL married a Prince de Scey-Montbellard. Then In 1 Miss Florence Hazard, daughter of B. C. Hazard, a millionaire catsup manufacturer of Shrewsbury, N. J married Prince Francis Auersperg, w'ho had been a poor physician in New York, and this International marriage might, so far as rank is concerned, have been one of the most brilliant yet made fry an American girl, since this prince belonged to one of those mediatized, or formerly reigning houses of Germany, rather than to the mere nobility. But because of his marriage, he was obliged by his family to resign all of his rights and prerogatives as a member of a media tized house, and to descend to the rank of the ordinary nobility, as In the case of the mediatized Count Foppenhelm. whose countess, now divorced, was a Miss Wheeler, of New York. Princess Auersperg also left her husband after a short and stormy married life. Our Princess Elopes. The next American Princess entered upon the page of history was the wealthy but ill-fated Clara Ward, of Detroit, who In 1SJ0 married the Prince de Chimay, of th old Frenoh house of that name, and who. after living with him five years, spending $300,000 In repairing his estates and bearing him two children, ran away with nigo. a Hungarian gypsy musician, who has lately been performing in this country. The Prince, who has been de scribed In the American prints as of irre proachable conduct, obtained a divorce In 1897. after which the ex-Princess had the noble Chimay ; crest tattooed upon her arm and then distributed photographs of herself adorned In this manner. The courts gavs the Prince the custody of her 8 rOUCHE OF cMam ch es te r-. .nee Miss Zimmerman T I j la imam- mm4 La 1'r V PRINSESS as. CHJ&lAY ( m -rs.--v i I E I, - - 1 , 4 I : k w,: v'-j . . -fi Si v ' T - ' i f I Kt ' ) I r 4' is-- " I I B ' "-' ' ' I I I r.nr i i aT1 children. She was only in her teens when she married him. Our only other French Princess is Anna Gould, daughter of Jay Gould, who some months ago divorced Count Bonl de Castellane and this Sum mer married his cousin, Prince Helie de Sagan, whose mother, the former Princess, was leader of the Paris smart set Into which the former Countess de Castellane was ambitious to enter. Two American women have become Russian Princesses, this rank, however, as explained, being near the bottom of the list of titled Russians. One of these is Julia Dent Grant, granddaughter of President Grant, who married Prince Michael Cantacuzene, of the Russian Im perial Guards, and the other Is Amelie Rives, the Virginia girl who became famous for writing '"The Quick or the Dead." She first married John Arm strong Chanler. who after their divorce was adjudged Insane in New York State and who has lately appeared before the courts and had his name changed to Chaloner. Twelve years ago she married the Russian Prince Troubetzkoy. a painter, who has since maintained a studio in this country. Miss Elkins will become the 15th Amer ican Duchess when she marries the King Ot Italy's cousin. Of higher rank than any of the Princesses enumerated above have been the four American women who have become Duchesses of Marlborough and of Manchester. The first American Duchess of Marlborough was Mrs. Him mersley. stepmother of the present Duke. She was reputed to have Inherited $7,000. 000 and to have spent more than $1,000, 000. upon his palace, Blenhelmf. After his death she married Lord William Beres ford and endeavor to retain the title of Duchess, but Queen Victoria Insisted that she drop it and rest content with that of "Lady" Beresford. The young Duke, as we better remember, emulated his father and married an American heiress, Constielo Vanderbllt, daughter of William K. Vanderbilt, the New York multimillionaire. The younif Duchess' legal separation from her overbearing husband Is fresh In the public memory. Early In her married life It was said to be her ambition to eventually marry one of her children to one of King Edward's grandchildren. The last two Duchesses of Manchester have also been American women, the former having been Consuelo Yznaga, daughter of Antonio Yznaga, of Ravenswood, La., who had married a Vanderbilt. And, oddly enough, Oonsuelo Vanderbilt, who married the Duke of Marlborough, was named for this kins woman Consuelo Yznaga. who married the Duke of Manchester. The latter Duke was reckoned among the poorest Dukes of England, but he had an enviable social position, and his American wife soon became a favored friend of the pres ent Queen. The young Duke a few years back married Mies Helene, daughter of Eugene Zimmerman, of Cincinnati, who rose from petty officer to Lieutenant-Commander In our Navy during the Civil War, and later to president of the Cincin nati, Hamilton & Dayton railroad. His career, by the way, Is similar to that of Miss Elklns' maternal grandfather, ex Senator H. G. Davis, who, from brakemun on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, also rose to multimillionaire railroad king as well as to coal baron. A duke who has married two American women Is his grace de Dino, who as the French Marquis de Talleyrand-Perigord first wedded Miss Bessie Curtis, daughter of Joseph Davis Beers Curtis, of New York. This marriage, which occurred at Nice, was away back In 1867. and was one of our first international alliances to stir the fashionable world. Had they remained wedded she would have become a duchess, but they were divorce and not until after the separation did he fall heir to the title of Due de Dino. Then he made a duchess of Mrs. Adele Livingston Sampson, daughter of Joseph Sampson, of New York, and divorced wife of Frederick Livingston. His first wife has called her self the Marquise de Talleyrand-Perigord and has spent her Winters In New York. She Is a sister of the above-mentioned Miss Josephine Curtis, who became the Italian Princess of Ruspoll and of Poggio Suasa. Two members of the multimillionaire Singer family the same which produced the Princess de Scey-Montbeliard. men tioned above have become duchesses. These were Mrs. Isaac Singer, who mar ried the Duke of Camposelice, and Miss Isabella Singer, who wedded the Due de De cares. Other American duchesses not to be forgotten are Miss Mathilde Davis, who married the Duke of Santa Monfeltrio; Miss Mary E. Forbes, wife of the Duk3 de Cholseul-Praslln. and Miss Lowry. daughter of Archibald Lowry. of Wssh ington, who before he had inherited his title and while he was a young attache of the Spanish legation in Washington fell in love with and later married the Duke of Arcos, who directly following our war with Spain, served as Spanish min ister to the United States. This marriage has been a happy one, like that of Mat tie Mitchell, daughter of. the Ill-fated United States Senator 'Mitchell, of Ore gon, who married the Due de Rochefou cauld. ' French Titles Hoodooed. Miss May Goelet's becoming the Duch ess of Roxburghe Is fresher in the mind of the American reader, as Is Miss Helen Morton's (daughter of the ex-Vice-President) becoming the Duchess de Valencay. This latter marriage was one of the most unhappy of those culminating in the grac ing of a ducal coronet by the fair brow of an American girl. This Frenchman, a brother of Prince Helie de Sagan, now husband of Anna Gould, was Comte Boson de Perigord when Miss Morton married him in London in 1901. Soon after the marriage, it Is said, the Comte obtained from his father-in-law $543,673 to purchase the Chateau de Valencay, the possession of which bestowed upon him the title of due and of his bride as Duch ess de Valencay. Mr. Morton advanced the money on condition that the property should be held In his daughter's name, and this stipulation Incensed the family of his titled son-in-law. A separation followed and the Duchess applied to the courts for a dissolution of the legal bond. The last American girl to become a duchess had also a sad climax to her marriage. This was Miss Shonts. daugh ter of Theodore P. Shonts, former chair man of the Panama Canal Commission. But a few weeks after her marriage last Winter to the French Due de Chaulnes, the latter suddenly dropped dead In Paris. The curse which has hung over French titles since the days of Louis the Grand seems not to spare the American heiress. It is a question whether they are worth striving for, considering that many of them are clouded; that after the guillo tining of the old nobles many of the lat ter's servants and other spurious persons rose to claim them; that since then, in France, any one has been able to as sume them whether as comptess or prin cess without provoking the smallest in terference of the government. Could HendrickHudson See It Now What Would He Tlilok of the River That Bears His Same? (ft O.METIMES I wonder," said a Riv-ersldu-dri ve dweller to the New York Sun, '-what our old frlpml Henry Hudson would think If he could come back and see the river that bears his name as it is now. and especially I'd like to have him see it at night. "1 think I'd tak him over to Jersey City first and let him see the marvel ous spectacle of Manhattan's tall build ings lighted. Then I'd bring him up here to Upper Riverside drive, where the city is quieter, and set him down here in the stillness and let him look at his river at night as he would see It from our window. "There he would see the broad river with th.i tall Palisades beyond. Just the same as in his own time, but In every other way how different? Look ing across the silent water, he sees moving steadily up the farther bank in his time at riisht so dark and still a llKiit: tnd he marvels at that, but he marvels more when he sees another light appear at the top. to move stead ily down, and he marvels most of all when he sees that light coming down flash suddenly into a bright light that shines across the river the headlight of a trolley car flashing Into momen tary brightness as the car comes around a bend. - "Yes Henry would certainly marvel at that', at trolley cars climbing and de scending now the face of the Palisades. "Ynd as he looked through the dark ness he would marvel again as he saw sprlne Into view, crowning an eighth mile stretch of the farther high bank, an unbroken line of electric lights only he wouldn't know what they were these lights marking, where in his time the wilderness was quite unbrok en the site of a present-day amusement park. And as he looked along that farther bank he would see other lights scattered there on the shore and on the cliffs, and then perhaps he'd close his eyes, to muse a little on these sights so extraordinary, and then when he looked up again, to let his eyes fall now on the face of the river, he would see there something more wonderful yet. "A red light, moving silently along In the middle of the broad stream, the port side light of a towboat. with white lights scattered for a long distance as'ern of her, and moving with her. these marking a string of canalboats an.l biirges. unseen and moving. silent ly In the darkness. "Or perhaps we see a tow coming up. Its towhoat showing its green starboard sidelight, with another long line of' white lights, but green light and the. white lights behind It moving just as stl'ntiy. . "But It Is not all silence here. Per haps we have from one passing, tow-' boat a musical boom, the clang of, the j gong In Its engine-room. And- now j before us pass other towboats, without , tows and moving faster, and if the, wind is right and the boats are near! enough our shore we may hear the , churning of their propellers, and per-; haps one of those boats turns here,! bringing a pretty sight, first her green j ilght and then her red light Into view.; "And bigger passenger boats pasa, j their paddle-wheels smashing the water, and the boats themselves all aglow; with light; and now comes one blgi river passenger steamer with a great; oblong ot electric lights running - all j around the upper rail of her hurricane; deck, while her walking beam is-out-; lined with lights in like manner, show- j ing there a great diamond shape' of j light that plays In the air with- the ; play of the walking beam: and really., what would Hudson, knowing neither, steam power nor electric light, think of that? And now far out In the! river, with Its red port light to us. is I passing silently a towboat towing homeward a great excursion barge, crowded with people and with its decks one above another all alight, whiles from this moving Island of light we! have the music of a band coming to ' us across the water. "So the river, as he would see it now. at night looking from our window, see-' Ing now, where In his time the sole! traveler abroad might have been some lone Indian In a canoe, unheard, and lni the darkness quite Invisible, a sort of! fairy spectacle, of darkness and still- ness alternating with lights and muslo and motion. Pity that Henry couldn't, come back to see his noble river now,' and especially to see this marvelous 1 after-nightfall show." Great Britain imports about IM0.O0o.0."O worth of timber, wood and manufactures! thereof yrlv. of which the I'nlted States' supplies about $i2.0lH,000 worth.