Ellen Odette Cuffe, Countess of Desart

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Ellen Odette Cuffe (Bischoffsheim), Countess of Desart

Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, England
Death: June 29, 1933 (75)
Dublin, Ireland
Place of Burial: Cornwall, England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Henri Louis Bischoffsheim and Clarissa Eva Odette Bischoffsheim
Wife of William Cuffe, 4th Earl of Desart
Sister of Amelia Catherine Fitzgerald, Lady Fitzgerald

Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:

About Ellen Odette Cuffe, Countess of Desart

She has been called '"the most important Jewish woman in Irish history"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellen_Cuffe,_Countess_of_Desart

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26535336/ellen_odette_cuffe
Ellen Odette “Countess of Desart” Bischoffsheim Cuffe Famous memorial
BIRTH 1 Sep 1857, London, City of London, Greater London, England
DEATH 29 Jun 1933 (aged 75), Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland
BURIAL Falmouth Cemetery, Falmouth, Cornwall Unitary Authority, Cornwall, England
PLOT Sec. E. Row B. Grave 2,
MEMORIAL ID 26535336 · View Source
British (Irish) Senator. Ellen Odette Bischoffsheim was born in London, the second daughter of Henry Louis Bischoffsheim, a wealthy banker, and his wife Clarisse (nee Bledermann.) She was educated at home. On the 29th. April 1881, at Christ Church in Down Street, Mayfair, she married the Fourth Earl of Desart. He died in 1898 and, although she spent most of the next decade and a half in England, in 1912, she moved to County Kilkenny in Ireland. In her entry in "Who's Who", she described her interests as: "The usual duties of a well-educated intelligent woman, conscientiously carried out; very strong anti-suffrage views; took an active part in England in combating the agitation for women's suffrage." Nonetheless, in 1922, she was nominated by President Cosgrave for membership of the Senate of the Irish Free State, and accepted the position, becoming the first Jewish woman to be a member of any Senate in the world. Another of her interests was the Irish language. She never learned to speak it herself, but funded schools to teach it, believing that there were parallels between the Gaelic and the Hebrew tongues, as both had become almost obsolete but had been revived. She wrote only two books: "A Guide for Secretaries, Public and Private", and "Style and Title", but contributed many articles for publication in periodicals. She died in Waterloo Road in Dublin, but was buried next to her husband in Falmouth, where her funeral service was conducted according to the Jewish rites.
Bio by: Iain MacFarlaine

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Ellen Odette Cuffe, Countess of Desart's Timeline

1857
September 1, 1857
London, England
1933
June 29, 1933
Age 75
Dublin, Ireland
1933
Age 75
Falmouth Cemetery, PLOT Sec. E. Row B. Grave 2, Cornwall, England (United Kingdom)