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Bettina Riddle von Hutten

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American-born novelist
Bettina Riddle, Baroness von Hutten zum Stolzenberg, in an 1899 publication

Bettina Riddle (February 14, 1874 – January 26, 1957), also known as Betsey Riddle, and later as Baroness von Hutten, was an American-born novelist, specializing in historical fiction. As an American in England during World War I, she was arrested and fined as an enemy alien, because she had a German ex-husband.

Early life and family

Elizabeth Riddle was born in Erie, Pennsylvania, the daughter of John Simms Riddle, a lawyer and state legislator, and Kate Howard Riddle. Her grandfather was Congressman William Alanson Howard, and her brother was a medical writer, Hugh Howard Riddle. Bettina's grandmother Mary Dickinson Riddle was a cousin of artist Mary Cassatt. Among her uncles were ambassadors Thomas A. Scott and Thomas J. O'Brien.

She called herself "Pam" for a time, after the most popular of her fiction-characters, and kept a pet monkey like the fictional Pam. In 1910 she tried acting.

Personal life

She married Friedrich Karl August, the Baron von Hutten zum Stolzenberg, in 1897, in Florence. They had two children, Karl (1898-1971) and Katharina (1902-1975). They divorced "by mutual consent" in 1909, amidst rumors of her infatuation with Italian tenor Francesco Guardabassi.

She soon had two more children with actor Henry Ainley, actor Richard Ainley (1910-1967) and Henrietta Riddle (b. 1913). Henrietta was briefly engaged to Alistair Cooke in 1932.

Bettina von Hutten lived in England but wintered in Rome. During World War I she lived under travel restrictions as an "enemy alien" in England, because of her German ex-husband. She was arrested and fined for breaking these restrictions. In 1921 she was badly injured in a car accident near Danzig; in 1925, she was in bankruptcy. She regained her American citizenship in 1938, and lived in California during World War II. She converted to Roman Catholicism late in life, and died in 1957, in London, aged 83 years.

Her granddaughter Katrine von Hutten (1944-2013) was a German writer and translator.

Career

Novels by Betsey Riddle include:

  • Miss Carmichael's Conscience (1898)
  • Marr'd in Making (1900)
  • Our Lady of the Beeches (1902)
  • Violett (1904)
  • Araby (1904)
  • Pam (1905)
  • Pam Decides (1906)
  • What Became of Pam (1906)
  • The One Way Out (1906)
  • He and Hecuba (1906)
  • Kingsmead, a Novel (1909)
  • The Halo (1911)
  • Beechy: or, The Lordship of Love (1909)
  • The Green Patch (1911)
  • Sharrow (1912)
  • Maria (1914)
  • Helping Hersey (1914)
  • Bird's Fountain (1915)
  • Mag Pye (1917)
  • The Bag of Saffron (1918)
  • Happy House (1919)
  • Mother-in-Law (1922)
  • Mice for Amusement: A Novel (1934)
  • Lives of a Woman (1935, adapted for the stage as There Was an Old Woman in 1938)
  • Die She Must (1936)
  • Youth Without Glory (1938)
  • What Happened is This (1939).

Further:

  • Julia
  • Candy, and Other Stories
  • Flies
  • Eddy and Édouard
  • The Curate's Egg.

References

  1. John Huston Finley and William Peterson, ed., Nelson's Perpetual Loose-Leaf Encyclopedia (Thomas Nelson 1920): 460.
  2. "The Baroness Bettina von Hutten" The Bookseller, Newsdealer, and Stationer (January 1, 1916): 15.
  3. "Lady at the Tea Table" (1883).
  4. Mary Cassatt: A Life (Yale University Press 1994): 165. ISBN 9780300164886
  5. ^ "Baron Divorces American Wife" Oregon Daily Journal (May 8, 1909): 1. via Newspapers.com
  6. "Online Books by Betsey Riddle Hutten zum Stolzenberg", Online Books page.
  7. ^ "'Pam', Author of 'Pam', has been Divorced" St. Louis Post-Dispatch (May 8, 1909): 3. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  8. "Authoress of 'Pam' in Debut on Amateur Stage" Los Angeles Times (January 16, 1910): 112. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  9. "Travel Split Von Huttens" New York Times (May 23, 1909): C1.
  10. Nick Clarke, Alistair Cooke: A Biography (Arcade Publishing 1999): 54. ISBN 9781628720167
  11. "Literary Baroness in Rome" Washington Post (March 13, 1910): 8. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  12. "Baroness von Hutten Fined" Feilding Star (September 26, 1916): 2.
  13. "Baroness von Hutten Hurt in Runaway" New York Times (October 15, 1921).
  14. "Order Against Baroness von Hutten" New York Times (November 11, 1925): 2.
  15. ^ "Baroness von Hutten; Novelist Dies in London at 83--Wrote 'Pam' Stories" New York Times (January 29, 1957): 31.
  16. Rosa Ainley, 2 Ennerdale Drive: Unauthorized Biography (John Hunt Publishing 2011): 109-113. ISBN 9781846945601

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