Mary Alsop King Waddington


Mary Alsop King Waddington was an American author. She particularly wrote about her life as the wife of a French diplomat.

Early life

Mary was born in New York City, New York on April 28, 1833 the daughter of Charles King, an American academic, politician, newspaper editor and the ninth president of Columbia College and his second wife, Henrietta Liston Low.
Her paternal grandfather was U.S. Senator Rufus King, the Federalist candidate for both Vice President and President of the United States. Her maternal grandfather was Nicholas Low, a New York merchant and developer.

Career

Mary moved to France with her family in 1871, where she met her eventual husband. During World War I, she helped raise funds for soldiers and refugees.
Mary was the author of Letter of a Diplomat's wife, Italian letters of a Diplomat's wife, Chateau and Country Life in France, and My First Years as a Frenchwoman.
She also wrote magazine articles, including a paper on International Marriages in Scribner's Magazine in October 1907.

Personal life

In 1874, she married William Henry Waddington in Paris. Waddington was a French statesman who became the Prime Minister of France in 1879, and later French Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1883 to 1893. He was born at Saint-Rémy-sur-Avre in Normandy and was the son of Thomas Waddington, a wealthy cotton manufacturer, and Janet Mackintosh Colin Chisholm. His parents were both naturalized citizens of France, born in England. He was the brother of Richard Waddington, a French legislator and historian, and cousin of Charles Waddington, a French philosopher. They were the parents of one son:
She died on June 30, 1923 in Paris, France.