Historical records matching Margarethe Anna Marie Stonborough
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About Margarethe Anna Marie Stonborough
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Stonborough-Wittgenstein
Margarethe "Gretl" Stonborough-Wittgenstein (September 19, 1882, Neuwaldegg - September 27, 1958, Vienna), of the prominent and wealthy Viennese Wittgenstein family, was a sister of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein and the pianist Paul Wittgenstein. An intellectual like them, she took interest in mathematics and psychoanalysis. She was the subject of a famous 1905 portrait by the artist Gustav Klimt: it was sold in 1960 by her son Thomas and may now be seen in the Neue Pinakothek gallery in Munich.
On 7 January, 1905, she married a wealthy American with interests in chemistry and medicine, Jerome Stonborough (1873 -June 1938, suicide). Of German Jewish ancestry and born Jerome Herman Steinberger, he had had his name changed into Stonborough in 1900. He was also an art collector. They divorced in 1923, having had two sons:
Dr. Thomas Humphrey Stonborough (1906-?). His Swiss friend Marguerite Respinger (1904-2000), whom he had met when he was studying in Cambridge and had invited to Vienna, was briefly (1926-1931) the only known female interest of Ludwig Wittgenstein. In 1939, Thomas Stonborough married Elizabeth Churchill, but they soon divorced (she remarried Washington Evening Star columnist Constantine Brown, and became a journalist and anti-communist activist under the name of Elizabeth Churchill Brown).
Major John Jerome Stonborough (11 June 1912, Vienna - 29 April 2002, Ferndown, Dorset). Although a US citizen, he served in the Canadian army during Second World War as an intelligence officer and interpreter. He married the daughter of a distinguished Northumberland family, Veronica Morrison-Bell (daughter of Sir Claude William Hedley Morrison-Bell, 2nd Baronet), and after the war lived between Britain and Austria.
After the First World War, Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein was appointed by the American Relief Administrator Herbert Hoover (later president of the United States) as special representative of the American Relief Program for Austria.
When working in juvenile prisons as a psychotherapy adviser, she came into contact with Sigmund Freud and was analyzed by him during two years. They remained in contact until Freud's death.
Stonborough House
In 1926, she commissioned her brother Ludwig with the architect Paul Engelmann to design and build the famous Stonborough House for her in Vienna. Sold by her son Thomas in 1968, this noted building still stands today, and now houses the Bulgarian Cultural Institute.
In 1940, she emigrated to the USA, but returned to Austria after the War and obtained restitution of part of her wealth which had been confiscated by the Nazis.
Geburtsmatrikel:
https://data.matricula-online.eu/de/oesterreich/wien/17-dornbach/01...
Margarethe Anna Marie Stonborough's Timeline
1882 |
September 19, 1882
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Vienna, Austria
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1906 |
January 9, 1906
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Berlin, Berlin, Germany
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1912 |
June 11, 1912
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Wien, Österreich (Austria)
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1958 |
September 27, 1958
Age 76
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Vienna, Austria
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???? |
Gmunden, Gmunden, Oberösterreich, Austria
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