Charles Henry Marshall Jr. (February 19, 1838 – July 2, 1912)[1] was an American businessman, art collector and philanthropist who was prominent in society during the Gilded Age.
Marshall was a businessman and merchant who ran the firm of Charles H. Marshall and Co.[4] He also had holdings in transatlantic steamship companies and various insurance companies.[5] He served as a director of the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company of New York, the Hanover National Bank, the Hanover Safe Deposit Company, the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and a trustee of the Seamen's Bank for Savings.[1]
In 1892, Marshall and his wife were included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred", purported to be an index of New York's best families, published in The New York Times.[6][7] Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom.[8]
On April 30, 1888, Marshall was married to Josephine Mozier Banks (1860–1933). Josephine, who was born in Middletown, Rhode Island, was the second daughter of Dr. James Lenox Banks and Isabella (née Mozier) Banks.[9] She was also a niece of bibliophile and philanthropist James Lenox. Together, they maintained a home at 6 East 77th Street in New York City and were the parents of:[5]
Evelyn Isabella Marshall (1889–1979),[10] who married banker and publisher Marshall Field III (1893–1956) in 1915.[11][12] They divorced in 1930, and in 1937 she married Diego Suarez Costa (1888–1974), counselor to the Colombian delegation to the United Nations in 1937 who later became the press attaché and minister counselor for Chile in Washington, D.C. from 1948 until 1952.[10]
Marshall died from an acute aneurysm at his apartment, at 44 Rue de Villejust in Paris, France, on July 2, 1912.[1]
Descendants
Through his daughter Evelyn, he was the grandfather of Barbara Field (1918–1984), Bettine Field,[16]Marshall Field IV (1916–1965), the owner of the Chicago Sun-Times.[11]
Through his son Charles, he was the grandfather of Peter Marshall and Helen Huntington Marshall (1918–2007),[17] who married conductor Ernest Schelling and, after Schelling's death, cellist János Scholz.[18]