Clara Longworth de Chambrun explained

The Comtesse de Chambrun
Birth Name:Clara Eleanor Longworth
Birth Date:18 October 1873
Birth Place:Mount Adams, Cincinnati
Death Place:Paris
Restingplace:Picpus Cemetery
Alma Mater:Sorbonne
Parents:Nicholas Longworth II
Susan Walker
Relations:Nicholas Longworth (brother)

Clara Eleanor Longworth de Chambrun, Comtesse de Chambrun (October 18, 1873 – June 1, 1954)[1] was an American patron of the arts and scholar of Shakespeare.

Early life

Longworth de Chambrun was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on October 18, 1873. She was a daughter of Nicholas Longworth and the former Susan Walker. She belonged to a wealthy family that was involved in Ohio politics. Her father was an Ohio State Supreme Court judge, and her brother (also named Nicholas Longworth) was a congressman from Ohio for three decades, eventually becoming Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1925-31. He married Alice Roosevelt (daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt) in 1906. She was reputed to dislike Alice. She was friends with Josephine Crane, the second wife of Winthrop M. Crane, governor of Massachusetts.

She was attendant at her cousin Margaret Rives Nichols's marriage to the Marquis Pierre de Chambrun (elder brother of diplomat and writer Charles de Chambrun) on December 12, 1895.[2]

Career

In 1921, the same year that her daughter died, she earned a doctorate from the Sorbonne, at the age of 48, and five years later she received the Bordin Prize of the Académie française for a book on Shakespeare which she wrote in French. She was one of the founding members of the American Library in Paris, and served as a trustee from 1921 through 1924. This was followed in 1928 by her election as a Chevalier of the French Legion of Honour.

Through her son's marriage to the daughter of the Premier of France, the Countess was able to keep the American Library in Paris open even after France's declaration of war in September 1939, organized an administrative set-up which made it possible to keep it independent after the U.S. entered the war.[3] She acted as its director until the fall of 1944 when her ties to Laval became a liability. Before she died, however, thanks were given to her for her actions.

Personal life

She married Count Aldebert de Chambrun, later General de Chambrun, a direct descendant of the Marquis de Lafayette on February 19, 1901 in Cincinnati. Aldebert was the French Military attaché in Washington, D.C. at one time, before serving as an artillery officer in World War I. He is reputed to have written his wife about the pleasure he had in shelling his own château, near Saint-Mihiel, with artillery as part of a six-week siege because it was occupied by German forces, though this later turned out to be a hoax.[4] [5] Together, they were the parents of two children:

In the fall of 1935, the countess rented her apartment at 58 rue de Vaugirard, at the corner of the Luxembourg Garden to the young poet Elizabeth Bishop, where Bishop wrote "Cirque d'Hiver", her first poem to be published in The New Yorker, and "Paris, 7 AM".

Works

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: MME.DE CHAMBRUN DIES IN PARIS AT 80. June 2, 1954. The New York Times .
  2. News: De Chambrun -- Nichols. December 13, 1895. The New York Times .
  3. News: Americans in Paris: Life and Death under Nazi Occupation 1940-44 . Christopher Silvester . April 17, 2009 . The Daily Express .
  4. News: SHELLS HIS OWN HOME, DELIGHTS IN ITS RUIN; Count de Chambrun, Artillery Officer, Turns Guns of His Battery on Germans Occupying It. Shadows Like Myself Countess De Chambrun Scribner's copyright 1936. October 30, 1914. The New York Times .
  5. Web site: Article. 30 October 1914. 19 September 2014.
  6. News: MISS DE CHAMBRUN DIES. December 19, 1921. The New York Times .
  7. Web site: Article. 19 December 1921. 19 September 2014.