Emile Beaumont d'Erlanger


Baron Emile Beaumont D'Erlanger was a French-born British merchant banker.

Life

He was the second eldest son of Frédéric Emile d'Erlanger, a banker working in Paris at the French branch of Emile Erlanger and Company and Marguerite Mathilde Slidell. .
His older brother, Baron Raphael Slidell d'Erlanger, who might have been more likely to follow his father into banking, was instead a scientist and professor at Heidelberg. Emile followed the banking route and from his father he was entrusted with presidency of the railway and tramway companies including the New General Traction Company in England.
In 1891, he became a naturalised British subject.
From 1911, he was chairman of the Channel Tunnel Company and financed its design.
The company also financed the building of railways in Rhodesia, Angola and the Congo.

Family

In Paris in 1895, he married Rose Marie Antoinette Katherine (Kate) Robert d'Aqueria de Rochegude. She was the daughter of a landowner and shipowner in Le Havre.
They lived in Falconwood, Woolwich, near Shooters Hill, south-east London, and also at 139 Piccadilly, the former home of Lord Byron. Later they moved to America and lived in Beverly Hills. His wife, the Baroness, was a patron of the arts, supporting artists such as Cecil Beaton, Romaine Brooks, and Sergei Diaghilev.
The couple had five children,