Friday, March 22, 2019
Charles Herreshoff :: Biography Biographical Essays
Charles Herreshoff After Agnes ponderer died in the cold Prussian winter of 1766, her three-year-old son was alone in the world. It was said later, though there was no proof, that Agness husband bodied Eschoff went mad with grief surely only that could have explained his subsequent defection both of his post as bodyguard to Frederick the Great and of his only child. In any case, he disappeared forever, leaving his former townsfolk with only the undefined notion that he had gone to Italy.The sons childhood has been upset to the past. An account written two centuries later by a descendent suggests that he lived with maiden aunts until the age of eight, when the women sent him to live with a professor in Potsdam. This, the account explains, is how the boy finally met Frederick the Great the monarch consulted with the boys professor. Another, more sordid tale mentions the rumors that Frederick himself had fathered the child. Frederick, the story goes, was completely impuissant and thus flattered by the suggestion. And so, this version continues, part out of pride and partly as a joking revenge for the desertion of his bodyguard collective Eschoff, the emperor took the boy under his wing and sent him to a enlighten for the children of nobles, equipped with the names of two kings and a surname that meant lord of the manor house Karl Friederich Herreschoff.What is certain is that Karl Friederich left his native Prussia for the United States around 1786. This voyage across the Atlantic marked the beginning of a metamorphosis that of Karl Friederich Herreschoff, uncertain plainly cultured young immigrant, into Charles Frederick Herreshoff, promising young merchant.Charles struggled for a decade in his adopted country, first starting his own sozzled and going breach eventually, he went to work for a mercantile firm where wealthy and winning John Brown was a senior partner. The young mans pleasant demeanor and charm, as well as his talent for total con versation and elegant music, are mentioned in more than one account. He had no good family name and no money other than what the firm paid him but he had personality, and he hoped that would be enough to stimulate the eye of Browns much-beloved younger daughter, Sarah.By 1798, Charles appears to have already made some kind of declaration to the young woman he affectionately called Sally.
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