Frederick Cunliffe-Owen

The basics

Quick Facts

Gender
Male
Birth30 January 1855
Death30 June 1926 (aged 71 years)
Star signAquarius
Family
Mother:Jenny von Reitzenstein
Father:Philip Cunliffe-Owen
Spouse:Emma Pauline de Couvreu de Deckersberg (22 November 1877-) Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen
Children:Philip Cunliffe-Owen Violet Cunliffe-Owen
Education
Lancing College
The details

Biography

Frederick Philip Lewis Cunliffe-Owen (30 January 1855 - 30 June 1926) was an English-born writer and newspaper columnist. He was a son of the exhibition organizer and museum director Philip Cunliffe-Owen and an older brother of the industrialist Hugo Cunliffe-Owen.

Frederick Cunliffe-Owen was educated at Lancing College and the University of Lausanne. He joined the diplomatic service and spent time in Egypt and Japan. In 1877 he married Emma Pauline de Couvreu de Deckersberg. They were divorced in Switzerland in 1887.

In 1885 Cunliffe-Owen moved to New York City with his second wife, Marguerite de Godart, comtesse de Planty et de Sourdis, who was known as Countess Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen. He wrote for the New York Tribune, becoming first the paper's foreign editor and later its society editor. Using the pseudonym "Marquise de Fontenoy", Cunliffe-Owen wrote syndicated feature articles about European aristocratic and court society. He also wrote a series called "An Ex-Attaché's Letters" about European diplomatic and political affairs and wrote editorials on these subjects for the New York Times. In 1916 he was sued by Rudolph de Landas Berghes for libel, after writing to the Bishop of Pennsylvania to warn him "against giving any countenance whatsoever to the soi-disant 'Prince de Berghes' ".

Cunliffe-Owen received numerous honours including being named a Knight of the Order of Orange-Nassau in 1908 and Commander of the Order of the British Empire and Knight Commander of the Order of the White Eagle (Serbia) in 1920.

Frederick Cunliffe-Owen died in New York on 30 June 1926. Countess Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen died on 29 August 1927.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 16 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.