Béla Hadik
Count Béla Hadik von Futak was a Hungarian politician who immigrated to the United States in 1946.
Early life
Hadik was born on January 31, 1905, in Budapest, Hungary. He was the youngest of four children born to Count János Hadik, who was briefly the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Hungary in October 1918 under Charles IV and his wife, Countess Alexandra Zichy. Among his siblings was Countess Amalia Andrea Johanna Alexandra, Countess Margaret Johanna Maria Gabriella Rafaella Eva Alexandra and Count Anthony Mary Martin Max.His paternal grandparents were Count Béla Hadik, a Rear Admiral and Privy Councillor, and Countess Ilona Barkóczy, only daughter and heir of Count János Barkóczy. Among his extended family was uncles Endre Hadik-Barkóczy and Miksa Hadik. Through his father, he was a great-great-grandson of András Hadik de Futak, famous for capturing the Prussian capital Berlin during the Seven Years' War. His uncle, Count Alexander Hadik, was rumored to have been engaged to Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt, the widow of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, in 1908, but the marriage never happened.
He graduated from the Agricultural University of Magyarovar.
Career
He was a member of the upper chamber of the Diet of Hungary, the House of Magnates, in prewar Hungary and during World War II, served as a lieutenant of Hungarian cavalry. He was made a Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece of the House of Habsburg.After his marriage, he took over management of the family estate and palace in Seregélyes.
In 1945, Hadik and his family left Hungary and in 1946, they moved to the United States and lived in Chester, New Hampshire, where they bought a house from her cousin Bill Vanderbilt. In Chester, he founded the Futaki Kennels and bred Vizsla pointers. Hadik ran dogs in national and regional field trials, and bred and trained several champions, including Futaki Darocz.
Personal life
On April 18, 1931, Hadik married Countess Alice Széchényi. She was the daughter of Count László Széchenyi, the former Hungarian Minister to the U.S., and his American born-wife, Countess Gladys Vanderbilt Széchenyi, who visited Hungary almost every summer with their five daughters. The wedding took place at St. Matthew's Church in Washington, D.C. and was officiated by the Most Rev. Pietro Fumasoni Biondi, the Apostolic Delegate to the United States, followed by a reception at the Hungarian Legation. As a wedding gift to Alice, his mother sent a "diamond necklace with earrings to match, which had been the gift of the Empress, Queen Maria Theresa, to an ancestor of the bride and bridegroom." A few weeks after their wedding, his wife was stricken with appendicitis, but recovered. Alice's younger sister later married, and divorced, Christopher Finch-Hatton, 15th Earl of Winchilsea in 1935. In 1946, he gave away Alice's youngest sister at her wedding to Alexander zu Eltz. Together, they were the parents of:- Count László Hadik, who married Countess Vita Stachwitz in 1956. He died in a plane crash in 1973.
- Count János Béla Hadik, who married Edith Genevieve Gaillet in 1962. He later married Kirsten Scheuer.
After a long illness, Hadik died on February 16, 1971, in Camden, South Carolina. He was buried at Seregélyes in Hungary. His wife died three years later in Lisbon.