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Julia Grant Cantacuzène

Julia Dent Grant Cantacuzène Speransky,[needs IPA] Princess Cantacuzène, Countess Speransky (June 6, 1876 – October 4, 1975), was an American author and historian. She was the eldest child of Frederick Dent Grant and his wife Ida Marie Honoré, and the second grandchild of Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th President of the United States. In 1899, she married Prince Mikhail Cantacuzène, a Russian general and diplomat.

Julia Dent Grant
Princess Julia Cantacuzène
Countess Speransky
BornJulia Dent Grant
(1876-06-06)June 6, 1876
White House, Washington, D.C., U.S.
Died(1975-10-04)October 4, 1975 (aged 99)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Noble familyGrant family (by birth)
Cantacuzino (by marriage)
Spouse(s)
(m. 1899; div. 1934)
IssuePrince Michael Mikhailovich Cantacuzène
Princess Bertha Mikhailovna
Princess Zenaida Mikhailovna
FatherFrederick Dent Grant
MotherIda Marie Honoré

Princess Cantacuzène was the author of three first-person accounts of the events leading up to the Russian Revolution in 1917, as well as a personal historian of the Russian people during that time. As the wife of a Russian nobleman, she was in a primary position to observe both the Imperial and Bolshevik positions during the Revolution.[1] The title of Countess Speransky has been alternatively spelled "Spéransky" and "Spiranski."

Early life edit

Julia Dent Grant was born at the White House on 6 June 1876. She was the first child of Frederick Dent Grant and his wife Ida Marie Honoré (1854–1930), the daughter of Henry Honoré, of French ancestry, who made his fortune in Chicago real estate. She was named for her grandmother, the First Lady Julia Grant née Dent. At the time of her birth, her father was assigned to the 4th U.S. Cavalry Regiment with the rank of lieutenant colonel. When Julia was five years old, her father took a leave of absence from the Army to assist his father, the former president Grant, in writing his memoirs.

Julia had fond memories of her grandfather, who died when she was nine years old. Due to severe financial setbacks, her family came to live with her grandparents in Long Branch, New Jersey [2] and she spent the last year (1884–1885) of her grandfather's life in his home with his companionship. Her memories of him were clearly fond ones, as she remembered the following:

My grandfather wasn't exactly gay, and I do not remember his laughing ever, but the talk between us was very interesting. He always took me seriously. I felt promoted and felt inclined to live up my position as his companion. Sometimes he would pinch my ear or my cheek and say softly, 'Julianna Johnson, don't you cry," and it rather teased me. But generally he held my pudgy dimpled hand on the palm of his, and we learned to count the fingers and dimples together; sometimes I made a mistake and sometimes he did so, letting me correct him. And he taught me "cat's cradle" with a string. We walked together hand in hand, silent frequently, but at other moments talking of our surroundings, and he called me habitually "my pet," or "my big pet," which made me very proud. I was not at all afraid of him, for he had a charming, gentle way of acting always, and though his face was generally grave, now and then a sudden gleam lighted up the eyes and made them seem to smile in answer to my chatter.

In 1889, President Benjamin Harrison appointed Julia's father as United States minister to Austria-Hungary. The Grant family traveled together to Austria-Hungary. After Grover Cleveland became president, Grant was confirmed to continue in his post in Europe. Julia made her formal début into society in Vienna, at the court of Empress Elisabeth of Austria. Frederick Dent Grant resigned his position as US ambassador in 1893,[3] whereupon the family returned to New York.

Marriage and family edit

 
Part of the Cantacuzene Wedding Party in Newport

Immediately after her father's tenure (1883–1887) as a police commissioner of the New York Police Department, Julia Dent Grant traveled to Europe in the company of her maternal aunt, Bertha Palmer (née Honoré) who was representing the Board of Lady Managers of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago World's Fair.) From 1891 to 1893, aunt and niece travelled throughout Europe to promote interest in the Exposition as well as to collect art. Julia met Prince Mikhail Cantacuzène, who was attached to the Russian embassy in Rome.[4] Prince Michael (or Mikhail) was Prince Mikhail Cantacuzène, son of Prince Mikhail Rodionovich Cantacuzène and Elizabeth Siscard, was born on 29 April 1875 in Odessa, Russia. He was a distant relative of Grigorii L'vovich Kantakuzen, who was the Russian representative to the U.S. from 1892 to 1895.[5] Two weeks after their first meeting in Rome, Prince Cantacuzène followed Julia to Cannes, ostensibly to serve under Grand Duke Kyrill. After a courtship of two days, the couple became engaged in Cannes,[6] then embarked upon four months of wedding preparation, during which time they were separated. The couple married at Beaulieu, an Astor home which her aunt Bertha Palmer had leased for the summer season, in Newport, Rhode Island, in a small, private Russian Orthodox ceremony the evening of 24 September 1899.[7][8] The following day at noon there was an Episcopal Church wedding service in All Saints' Memorial Chapel, Newport.[9][10]

Prince and Princess Cantacuzène resided in St. Petersburg (later Petrograd) or at their estate in Ukraine during their early married years, with the Princess giving birth to their three children, Mikhail Mikhailovich, Barbara or "Bertha" Mikhailovna, and Zinaida Mikhailovna. Princess Cantacuzène remained in St. Petersburg during World War I in which Prince Cantacuzène served as aide-de-camp and later Major-General, and finally General, in the service of Tsar Nicholas II. He served with distinction and was wounded in battle in 1914; as commander of the South Russia Cossacks, in 1915 he led 15,000 men in what has been called the last great cavalry charge against a fortified position in military history.[4] The family left Russia in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution; in 1917, they escaped from Petrograd with her jewels sewn into her clothing, and escaped via Finland to the United States. The couple moved to Washington, D.C., and attempted to attract support for a counter-revolution in Russia, but after news of the execution of the former Tsar and of his brother, Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia, ended their activism. The couple relocated to Sarasota, Florida, joining the firm founded by her aunt Bertha Palmer.

Prince and Princess Cantacuzène divorced on 27 October 1934,[11] after which Mrs. Julia Grant Cantacuzène, having re-established her U.S. citizenship and reverted to non-aristocratic title and style, moved back to her native Washington, D.C.

Children edit

  • Prince Mikhail Mikhailovitch Cantacuzène, Count Spéransky (b. 21 July 1900, St. Petersburg, d. 26 December 1972[12]), married first to Clarissa Curtis, daughter of Thomas Pelham Curtis and Frances Kellogg Small, second to Florence Bushnell Carr, and third to Florence Clarke Hall. He had a son and a daughter from his first marriage.[13]
  • Princess Barbara Mikhailovna Cantacuzène, Countess Spiransky (b. 27 March 1904, St. Petersburg, d. 7 January 1991[14]) married firstly Bruce Smith, secondly William Durrell Siebern.[15] She was known as Bertha. She had a son by her first husband, named Bruce Smith, as well.[14]
  • Princess Zinaida Mikhailovna Cantacuzène, Countess Spéransky (b. 17 November 1908, St. Petersburg, d. 17 September 1980[14]) married Sir John Coldbrook Hanbury-Williams, son of Major-General Sir John Hanbury-Williams and Annie Emily Reiss.[13] She was known as Ida. She had three children, a son and two daughters.[14]

She was survived, at her death, by her daughters, six grandchildren, 22 great-grandchildren, and three great-great-grandchildren.[16]

Writing career edit

Cantacuzène was the author of numerous articles which appeared in The New York Times, The Saturday Evening Post, and Woman's Home Companion[4] Her books included, "Russian People; Revolutionary Recollections," (1919) "Revolutionary Days; Recollections of Romanoffs and Bolsheviki, 1914–1917," (1920) and "My Life Here and There." (1922) All of her books were published in the U.S. by Charles Scribner's Sons, and in London by the firm of Chapman & Hall. "Revolutionary Days" (with selections from "My Life Here and There") was republished in December 1999 by R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company.

Later life edit

She was a founder of the Sulgrave Club, where she lunched regularly until 1970. She was active in the White Russian community in Washington. She went blind before she turned 80 years old, but regained partial eyesight two weeks before she turned 90.[16] She died in Washington on October 4, 1975, at the age of 99, and is buried at the National Cathedral.

Books edit

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Revolutionary Days". Chas Scribner's Sons. ASIN B000NPQAT2.
  2. ^ "My Life Here and There (excerpt)". Chas Scribner's Sons. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  3. ^ . U.S. Embassy in Vienna. Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  4. ^ a b c "Prince Michael and Princess Cantacuzène". Sarasota County History Center. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  5. ^ "PRINCE CANTACUZENE LEAVES US; Russia's Representative Changes Places With Stuttgart Minister". The New York Times. 26 October 1895. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  6. ^ Revolutionary Days. Charles Scribner's Sons.
  7. ^ "AN AMERICAN PRINCESS; Public Wedding of Miss Julia Grant and Prince Cantacuzene". The New York Times.
  8. ^ "Julia Dent Grant, Princess Cantacuzène". The New York Times. 23 September 1899. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  9. ^ Miss Julia Grant Married: The Ceremony of the Russian Church performed at Beaulieu, The New York Times, 25 Sept 1899, p. 7
  10. ^ An American Princess: Public Wedding of Miss Julia Grant and Prince Cantacuzene, The New York Times, 26 Sept 1899, p 6
  11. ^ "Grant's Kin Divorces Prince Cantacuzène". The New York Times. 28 October 1934. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  12. ^ Social Security Death Index, no. 329-24-6606
  13. ^ a b . Ancestry dot com. Archived from the original on 2011-01-08. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  14. ^ a b c d Revolutionary Days by Princess Julia Cantacuzene, Countess Speransky, nee Grant (Chicago: R R Donnelley & Sons Company, December 1999), lvi
  15. ^ . Ancestry dot com. Archived from the original on 2011-01-08. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  16. ^ a b Obituary of Princess Julia Cantacuzene, The New York Times, 7 October 1975, page 38.

Further reading edit

  • Croft, Lee B., Ashleigh Albrecht, Emily Cluff, and Erica Resmer. Entry on Grigorii L'vovich Kantakuzen (pp. 126–131) in Ambassadors: U.S.-to-Russia/Russia-to-U.S. Capstone Publications. 2010. ISBN 978-0-557-26469-8. Treats genealogy of Kantakuzen Princely line from Russian sources and from Princess Julia's personal writings.

External links edit

  • "The Ancestors of Prince Rodion Cantacuzene," Michael K. Smith, , 2001.

julia, grant, cantacuzène, julia, dent, grant, cantacuzène, speransky, needs, princess, cantacuzène, countess, speransky, june, 1876, october, 1975, american, author, historian, eldest, child, frederick, dent, grant, wife, marie, honoré, second, grandchild, ul. Julia Dent Grant Cantacuzene Speransky needs IPA Princess Cantacuzene Countess Speransky June 6 1876 October 4 1975 was an American author and historian She was the eldest child of Frederick Dent Grant and his wife Ida Marie Honore and the second grandchild of Ulysses S Grant the 18th President of the United States In 1899 she married Prince Mikhail Cantacuzene a Russian general and diplomat Julia Dent GrantPrincess Julia CantacuzeneCountess SperanskyBornJulia Dent Grant 1876 06 06 June 6 1876White House Washington D C U S Died 1975 10 04 October 4 1975 aged 99 Washington D C U S Noble familyGrant family by birth Cantacuzino by marriage Spouse s Prince Mikhail Cantacuzene m 1899 div 1934 wbr IssuePrince Michael Mikhailovich CantacuzenePrincess Bertha MikhailovnaPrincess Zenaida MikhailovnaFatherFrederick Dent GrantMotherIda Marie Honore Princess Cantacuzene was the author of three first person accounts of the events leading up to the Russian Revolution in 1917 as well as a personal historian of the Russian people during that time As the wife of a Russian nobleman she was in a primary position to observe both the Imperial and Bolshevik positions during the Revolution 1 The title of Countess Speransky has been alternatively spelled Speransky and Spiranski Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 2 1 Children 3 Writing career 4 Later life 5 Books 6 Ancestry 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editJulia Dent Grant was born at the White House on 6 June 1876 She was the first child of Frederick Dent Grant and his wife Ida Marie Honore 1854 1930 the daughter of Henry Honore of French ancestry who made his fortune in Chicago real estate She was named for her grandmother the First Lady Julia Grant nee Dent At the time of her birth her father was assigned to the 4th U S Cavalry Regiment with the rank of lieutenant colonel When Julia was five years old her father took a leave of absence from the Army to assist his father the former president Grant in writing his memoirs Julia had fond memories of her grandfather who died when she was nine years old Due to severe financial setbacks her family came to live with her grandparents in Long Branch New Jersey 2 and she spent the last year 1884 1885 of her grandfather s life in his home with his companionship Her memories of him were clearly fond ones as she remembered the following My grandfather wasn t exactly gay and I do not remember his laughing ever but the talk between us was very interesting He always took me seriously I felt promoted and felt inclined to live up my position as his companion Sometimes he would pinch my ear or my cheek and say softly Julianna Johnson don t you cry and it rather teased me But generally he held my pudgy dimpled hand on the palm of his and we learned to count the fingers and dimples together sometimes I made a mistake and sometimes he did so letting me correct him And he taught me cat s cradle with a string We walked together hand in hand silent frequently but at other moments talking of our surroundings and he called me habitually my pet or my big pet which made me very proud I was not at all afraid of him for he had a charming gentle way of acting always and though his face was generally grave now and then a sudden gleam lighted up the eyes and made them seem to smile in answer to my chatter In 1889 President Benjamin Harrison appointed Julia s father as United States minister to Austria Hungary The Grant family traveled together to Austria Hungary After Grover Cleveland became president Grant was confirmed to continue in his post in Europe Julia made her formal debut into society in Vienna at the court of Empress Elisabeth of Austria Frederick Dent Grant resigned his position as US ambassador in 1893 3 whereupon the family returned to New York Marriage and family edit nbsp Part of the Cantacuzene Wedding Party in Newport Immediately after her father s tenure 1883 1887 as a police commissioner of the New York Police Department Julia Dent Grant traveled to Europe in the company of her maternal aunt Bertha Palmer nee Honore who was representing the Board of Lady Managers of the World s Columbian Exposition Chicago World s Fair From 1891 to 1893 aunt and niece travelled throughout Europe to promote interest in the Exposition as well as to collect art Julia met Prince Mikhail Cantacuzene who was attached to the Russian embassy in Rome 4 Prince Michael or Mikhail was Prince Mikhail Cantacuzene son of Prince Mikhail Rodionovich Cantacuzene and Elizabeth Siscard was born on 29 April 1875 in Odessa Russia He was a distant relative of Grigorii L vovich Kantakuzen who was the Russian representative to the U S from 1892 to 1895 5 Two weeks after their first meeting in Rome Prince Cantacuzene followed Julia to Cannes ostensibly to serve under Grand Duke Kyrill After a courtship of two days the couple became engaged in Cannes 6 then embarked upon four months of wedding preparation during which time they were separated The couple married at Beaulieu an Astor home which her aunt Bertha Palmer had leased for the summer season in Newport Rhode Island in a small private Russian Orthodox ceremony the evening of 24 September 1899 7 8 The following day at noon there was an Episcopal Church wedding service in All Saints Memorial Chapel Newport 9 10 Prince and Princess Cantacuzene resided in St Petersburg later Petrograd or at their estate in Ukraine during their early married years with the Princess giving birth to their three children Mikhail Mikhailovich Barbara or Bertha Mikhailovna and Zinaida Mikhailovna Princess Cantacuzene remained in St Petersburg during World War I in which Prince Cantacuzene served as aide de camp and later Major General and finally General in the service of Tsar Nicholas II He served with distinction and was wounded in battle in 1914 as commander of the South Russia Cossacks in 1915 he led 15 000 men in what has been called the last great cavalry charge against a fortified position in military history 4 The family left Russia in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution in 1917 they escaped from Petrograd with her jewels sewn into her clothing and escaped via Finland to the United States The couple moved to Washington D C and attempted to attract support for a counter revolution in Russia but after news of the execution of the former Tsar and of his brother Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia ended their activism The couple relocated to Sarasota Florida joining the firm founded by her aunt Bertha Palmer Prince and Princess Cantacuzene divorced on 27 October 1934 11 after which Mrs Julia Grant Cantacuzene having re established her U S citizenship and reverted to non aristocratic title and style moved back to her native Washington D C Children edit Prince Mikhail Mikhailovitch Cantacuzene Count Speransky b 21 July 1900 St Petersburg d 26 December 1972 12 married first to Clarissa Curtis daughter of Thomas Pelham Curtis and Frances Kellogg Small second to Florence Bushnell Carr and third to Florence Clarke Hall He had a son and a daughter from his first marriage 13 Princess Barbara Mikhailovna Cantacuzene Countess Spiransky b 27 March 1904 St Petersburg d 7 January 1991 14 married firstly Bruce Smith secondly William Durrell Siebern 15 She was known as Bertha She had a son by her first husband named Bruce Smith as well 14 Princess Zinaida Mikhailovna Cantacuzene Countess Speransky b 17 November 1908 St Petersburg d 17 September 1980 14 married Sir John Coldbrook Hanbury Williams son of Major General Sir John Hanbury Williams and Annie Emily Reiss 13 She was known as Ida She had three children a son and two daughters 14 She was survived at her death by her daughters six grandchildren 22 great grandchildren and three great great grandchildren 16 Writing career editCantacuzene was the author of numerous articles which appeared in The New York Times The Saturday Evening Post and Woman s Home Companion 4 Her books included Russian People Revolutionary Recollections 1919 Revolutionary Days Recollections of Romanoffs and Bolsheviki 1914 1917 1920 and My Life Here and There 1922 All of her books were published in the U S by Charles Scribner s Sons and in London by the firm of Chapman amp Hall Revolutionary Days with selections from My Life Here and There was republished in December 1999 by R R Donnelley amp Sons Company Later life editShe was a founder of the Sulgrave Club where she lunched regularly until 1970 She was active in the White Russian community in Washington She went blind before she turned 80 years old but regained partial eyesight two weeks before she turned 90 16 She died in Washington on October 4 1975 at the age of 99 and is buried at the National Cathedral Books editRevolutionary Days Recollections of Romanoffs and Bolsheviki 1914 1917 published 1919 Charles Scribner s Sons Russian People Revolutionary Recollections published 1920 Charles Scribner s Sons My Life Here and There published 1922 Charles Scribner s SonsAncestry editAncestors of Julia Grant Cantacuzene16 Captain Noah Grant8 Jesse Root Grant17 Rachel Kelly4 President Ulysses S Grant18 John Simpson9 Hannah Simpson2 Frederick Dent Grant20 George Dent10 Colonel Frederick Fayette Dent21 Susannah Marbury Dawson5 Julia Boggs Dent22 John Wrenshall11 Ellen Bray Wrenshall23 Mary Bennington1 Julia Dent Cantacuzene Speransky Grant Princess Cantacuzene and Countess Speransky24 Jean Antoine Honore12 Francis Honore6 Henry Hamilton Honore13 Matilda Lockwood3 Ida Marie Honore14 Captain John Carr7 Eliza J Carr30 Edward D Arcy15 Mary Dorsey31 Sarah WyattReferences edit Revolutionary Days Chas Scribner s Sons ASIN B000NPQAT2 My Life Here and There excerpt Chas Scribner s Sons Retrieved 2009 03 23 FORMER U S AMBASSADORS TO AUSTRIA U S Embassy in Vienna Archived from the original on September 7 2008 Retrieved 2008 12 31 a b c Prince Michael and Princess Cantacuzene Sarasota County History Center Retrieved 2009 03 23 PRINCE CANTACUZENE LEAVES US Russia s Representative Changes Places With Stuttgart Minister The New York Times 26 October 1895 Retrieved 2009 03 23 Revolutionary Days Charles Scribner s Sons AN AMERICAN PRINCESS Public Wedding of Miss Julia Grant and Prince Cantacuzene The New York Times Julia Dent Grant Princess Cantacuzene The New York Times 23 September 1899 Retrieved 2009 03 23 Miss Julia Grant Married The Ceremony of the Russian Church performed at Beaulieu The New York Times 25 Sept 1899 p 7 An American Princess Public Wedding of Miss Julia Grant and Prince Cantacuzene The New York Times 26 Sept 1899 p 6 Grant s Kin Divorces Prince Cantacuzene The New York Times 28 October 1934 Retrieved 2009 03 23 Social Security Death Index no 329 24 6606 a b Cousins of John Crossley Princess Cantacuzene Ancestry dot com Archived from the original on 2011 01 08 Retrieved 2009 03 23 a b c d Revolutionary Days by Princess Julia Cantacuzene Countess Speransky nee Grant Chicago R R Donnelley amp Sons Company December 1999 lvi Cousins of John Crossley Princess Cantacuzene Ancestry dot com Archived from the original on 2011 01 08 Retrieved 2009 03 23 a b Obituary of Princess Julia Cantacuzene The New York Times 7 October 1975 page 38 Further reading editCroft Lee B Ashleigh Albrecht Emily Cluff and Erica Resmer Entry on Grigorii L vovich Kantakuzen pp 126 131 in Ambassadors U S to Russia Russia to U S Capstone Publications 2010 ISBN 978 0 557 26469 8 Treats genealogy of Kantakuzen Princely line from Russian sources and from Princess Julia s personal writings External links edit The Ancestors of Prince Rodion Cantacuzene Michael K Smith https web archive org web 20070626152805 http book smith tripod com dracula html 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julia Grant Cantacuzene amp oldid 1206402928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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