Winthrop Williams AldrichGBE (November 2, 1885 – February 25, 1974)[1] was an American banker and financier, scion of a prominent and powerful political family, and U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom.
During the First World War Aldrich had built, at his own expense, the patrol boat USS Herreshoff No. 309 which was leased by Aldrich to the U.S. Navy and patrolled the waters off of Rhode Island from November 15, 1917, to December 31, 1918, when it was returned to Aldrich.[1]
Aldrich had been commissioned a lieutenant (junior grade) in the Naval Reserve and was called to active duty on April 8, 1917, and was assigned to the Naval Training Station in Newport, Rhode Island. He transferred to the USS Niagara (SP-136) in September and was assigned as the ship's navigator. He was reassigned to the USS New Orleans (CL-22) in June 1918 and served on convoy duty. He was promoted to lieutenant on June 1 of the same year and, after the armistice, was released from active duty in December.[4]
In 1916, Aldrich was married to Harriet Alexander at the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church.[7] Guests at their wedding included "representatives of the Astor, Fish, Harriman, Rockefeller, Crocker, Webb, Rhinelander, Cutting, Vanderbilt, Bacon and other well-known families."[7] Harriet was the eldest daughter of Harriet (née Crocker) Alexander and Charles Beatty Alexander of New York City and Tuxedo Park, New York and the granddaughter of railroad executive Charles Crocker. Her younger sisters were Jannetta and Mary Crocker Alexander,[7] who married Sheldon Whitehouse in 1920.[8] Together, they were the parents of:[1]
Mary Aldrich (b. 1921), who married Robert Homans, a lawyer with the San Francisco law firm of Morrison, Holloway, Schuman & Clark.[9]
Harriet Aldrich (1922–2014),[10] who married Dr. Edgar A. Bering Jr.[11]
Lucy Truman Aldrich, who married David Wetmore Devens, a son Arthur Lithgow Devens III, in 1945.[12] They divorced and she remarried to her first cousin, George Davenport Aldrich,[3] in 1971.[13] After his death, she married lawyer Francis Hooks Burr in 1979.[14]
Elizabeth Brewster "Liberty" Aldrich, who married J. Woodward Redmond in 1946.[17][18]
He was an amateur musician and an artist whose specialty was watercolor seascapes. As a yachtsman he was navigator, under skipper Harold S. Vanderbilt, of the 1930 America's Cup J Class defender Enterprise.[19] He built a 40-room manor on 108 acres in Brookville on Long Island.[20]
Aldrich died at his home, 960 Fifth Avenue in New York City, on February 25, 1974.[1]
Honors
In 1947, he was appointed an honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire by King George VI.[19] This entitled him to use the postnominal letters GBE, but not to the prenominal title "Sir" as he was not a British subject.