Will
he get her?
Won’t
he get her?
Anyway the Duke has met her.
If
pop lets her,
And
he gets her,
Use her well Abruzzi’d better
Will
he get her?
Won’t
he get her,
What’s the latest “foreign letter”?
c. Aug. 20, 1910
THE ELKINS-ABRUZZI AFFAIR by Evangeline
Holland
A few
years before Anita Rhinelander Stewart nabbed a royal title, there was
another American heiress who made an attempt to capture a gentleman born to the
purple: Katherine Elkins, the daughter of West Virginia Senator Stephen Benton
Elkins. Her suitor was the Duke of Abruzzi, the grandson of King Vittorio
Emanuele II of Italy, and celebrated mountaineer. In 1907, the Duke met Miss
Elkins in Washington D.C. when he was invited to a private luncheon by
President Roosevelt. Romance apparently blossomed and the rumor mill began to
work overtime to suss out the details of their pairing. Unfortunately for Miss
Elkins, the House of Savoy rejected the notion of her joining their royal
house, mostly because it was an anathema to think that the next potential Queen
of Italy would not only be American, but a Protestant!
From 1907 to 1912, Miss Elkins and the Duke of
Abruzzi’s unofficial affianced status faced the censure of his family and the
rampant speculation of the press, the Pope was rumored to have offered to make
Senator Elkins a duke, and the potential of an American girl being treated as
an equal with her in-laws earned the interest of Austria-Hungarian papers, who
saw this as a potential blow against the Princess Hohenberg’s morganatic
status. Sadly to say, the two did not get their happily-ever-after. Whether it
be the pressure against the match, the lack of privacy, or maybe even the
falling out of love after six year, but Miss Elkins and the Duke of Abruzzi
parted ways for good in 1912, and she married William Floyd Hitt, son of
Congressman Robert R. Hitt in 1913, who had continued to pursue her even as she
was embroiled with the Duke of Abruzzi. Strangely enough, Katherine and William
divorced in 1921, only to remarry in 1933, and their remarriage lasted until
her death in 1936. The Duke continued in his explorations, and took part in the
Italian colonization of Somalia, later settling in the country and marrying a
Somali woman, where he lived until his death in 1933.
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