Lady Elizabeth Marshall Drummond

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Lady Elizabeth Marshall Drummond (Lamson)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York City, New York, USA
Death: March 25, 1912 (63)
Paris, Île-de-France, France
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Charles Lamson and Elizabeth Robertson Lamson
Wife of Sir Victor Arthur Wellington Drummond, KCMG CB
Sister of Fidelia Marshall Hoffman; Charles Marshall Lamson; Caroline Lane Brown; Charlotte L. Appleton; Katherine Walsh de Florez and 3 others

Label: 810
Managed by: Charles William Γεώργιος...
Last Updated:

About Lady Elizabeth Marshall Drummond

Full text https://archive.org/details/descendantsofwil00lams/page/n10 "Descendants of William Lamson of Ipswich, Mass 1634-1917" by Dr. William J. Lamson p. 162-164

810 Elizabeth Marshall, b. Jan. 12, 1849, at New York City, N. Y. ; m. Hon. Sir Victor Arthur Wellington Drummond, of Cadlands, Eng., 1882, K. C. M. G., C. B. At the time of her marriage, Mr. Drummond was attached to the British Embassy at Washington. He was knighted later in his diplomatic career. He d. in 1908, and Lady Drummond moved her home from Munich to Paris, where she lived on the Avenue Victor Hugo. She d. there March 25, 1912.

Obituary From the New York Times [no date] :-

LADY DRUMMOND IS DEAD

Former Miss Elizabeth M Lamson of New York Dies at her home in Paris.

"Lady Drummond, the widow of Sir-Victor Arthur Wellington Drummond of Cadlands, England, died on Monday, in Paris, according to cable dispatches received by her family in this country yesterday. Before her marriage Lady Drummond was Elizabeth Marshal Lamson of New York. She was the daughter of the late Charles Lamson and Elizabeth Marshall, whose ' home in this city was at 11 West Twenty-first Street.

The wedding took place in New York about thirty years ago, Mr. Drummond having met Miss Lamson when he was attached to the British Embassy at Washington. He was knighted later in his diplomatic career.

At the time of her husband's death four years ago. Lady Drummond moved her home from Munich to Paris, and at the time of her death was living on the Avenue Victor Hugo. She Is survived by six sisters, Mrs. Richard Hoffman of New York, Mrs. John M. Brown of Boston, Mrs. Robert C. Cornell of New York, Mrs. Pedro de Florez of Paris, Mrs. E. D. Appleton of New York, and Mrs. Charles F. Guthrie of New York. She had been ill for several months and her death was not unexpected. Three of her sisters were with her, Mrs. De Florez, whose home is in Paris, and Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Appleton, who had gone there when it became evident that Lady Drummond's illness was serious. Mrs. Cornell, who is the wife of Magistrate Cornell, is on the ocean, bound for Paris. She sailed on Saturday. The burial will be at Cadlands."

Colonel Archibald Gracie proffered his services during the voyage to the bereaved Lamson sisters, Mrs Edward D. Appleton, Mrs Robert C. Cornell and Mrs J. Murray Brown. As a boy, Gracie had attended St. Paul's (the American Eton) with Mrs Cornell's husband and, being an indefatigable net-worker, he didn't hesitate to re-open the acquaintance aboard the 'Titanic'. As David Huffaker, Brian Ahern and Mike Ellingham have explored at some length, both here and elsewhere, the Lamson sisters were securely, if discreetly, placed in the upper echelons of New York Society. In addition, and in common with many other first-class passengers, they also maintained family connections with the European elite. In the case of Mrs Brown, Mrs Appleton and Mrs Cornell, their sister, Elizabeth Marshall Lamson, had married Victor Arthur Wellington Drummond, an English diplomat, whom she had met whilst he was posted as Secretary to the British Legation in Washington. Their wedding, according to 'The New York Times' of 16 April, 1882, was 'crowded with the fashionable people of New York' (including Caroline Astor, the Stuyvesant Fishes and the Cornelius Vanderbilts) and her younger sisters Katherine and Charlotte - the latter of whom would become Mrs Edward Appleton - acted as bridesmaids. Lord Cadogan's son, Henry, was best man. The groom hailed from a wealthy dynasty of English bankers, who had established Drummond's of Charing Cross, and who oversaw the finances of many members of the aristocracy. Their success in business was no doubt aided by the fact that Victor's mother was Lady Elizabeth Frederica Manners, a daughter of the 5th Duke of Rutland. Connections with the ducal family were kept up into the next generation - the 1871 Census had Victor's brother (Elizabeth Lamson's future brother-in-law) Cecil staying at the Rutland family seat, Belvoir Castle in Leicestershire, together with a very select house-party, which included the Duchess of Cambridge, Prince and Princess Francis of Teck (Queen Mary's parents), the Duke and Duchess of St Albans and no less than four sets of earls and countesses: Shrewsbury, Ferres, Rosslyn and Wharncliffe. In addition, Victor's sister married the 9th Earl of Scarborough, making the 10th Earl Elizabeth's nephew by marriage. During a prestigious diplomatic career on the Continent (most helpfully out-lined by Mike Ellingham on the 'Rich People in Society' thread), Victor was knighted, becoming Sir Victor and his wife Lady Drummond. He died around 1908 - oddly, Peerage.com, the most comprehensive website of English aristocratic genealogy, does not list Sir Victor as Cecil Drummond's brother but he undoubtedly was. Following her husband's death, the widowed Lady Drummond moved from Munich to Paris, where she resided on the Avenue Victor Hugo. She was not to live much longer herself - in late March, 1912, she died in France, with Charlotte Appleton, Caroline Brown and Katherine de Florez (the latter herself based in Paris) at her side. Sadly, Malvina Cornell was still en route from the States and so did not arrive in time to say a final farewell to her older sister. Lady Drummond's funeral took place at the family seat, Cadlands, in Hampshire, and the three Lamson sisters subsequently made the short journey from there to Southampton, where they boarded the 'Titanic' for the journey home...

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Lady Elizabeth Marshall Drummond's Timeline

1849
January 12, 1849
New York City, New York, USA
1912
March 25, 1912
Age 63
Paris, Île-de-France, France