Hermann de Pourtalès


Count Hermann Alexander de Pourtalès was a Swiss sailor who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.

Early life

Pourtalès was born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland on 31 March 1847. He was a son of Count Alexandre Joseph de Pourtalès and the former Auguste Saladin. His sister, Isabelle Marguerite de Pourtales, was the wife of archaeologist Henri Édouard Naville, a prominent Egyptologist who found a statue of Ramesses II at Bubastis.
His paternal grandparents were Louis de Pourtalès and Sophie de Guy d'Audanger. His nephew was Bernard de Pourtalès. The Pourtalès family were French Huguenots who settled in Neuchâtel following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. His maternal grandfather was Antoine Charles Guillaume Saladin.

Career

Pourtalès was a captain of the Cuirassiers of the Guard, in the service of the King of Prussia Wilhelm I who later became the German Emperor.

Olympic career

He was a member of the Swiss boat Lérina, which won the gold medal in the first race of 1 — 2 ton and silver medal in the second race of 1 — 2 ton class. He also participated in the open class, but did not finish. His wife Hélène and nephew Bernard were crew members.

Personal life

Pourtalès was married to Marguerite "Daisy" Marcet, a daughter of William Marcet, president of the Royal Meteorological Society. In 1887, the family returned to Switzerland, where they lived first at Malagny, near Versoix, in the Canton of Geneva. Together, they were the parents of:
After the death of his first wife in 1888, Pourtalès remarried to American heiress Helen Barbey in 1891. She was a daughter of Henry Isaac Barbey and Mary Lorillard Barbey and a granddaughter of Pierre Lorillard III Her sister Eva was married to André Poupart, Baron de Neuflize. After their marriage, they lived at Mies in the Canton de Vaud.
Count de Pourtalès died on 28 November 1904 in Geneva.