Leo Frédéric Alfred Baron d'Erlanger (2 July 1898 – 25 October 1978) was an English merchant banker and air transport promoter, co-founder of British Airways, Chairman of the Erlanger Bank and of the Channel Tunnel Company.
Business
Baron Leo Frédéric Alfred d'Erlanger was a merchant banker and a promoter of the British aircraft industry.[1][2] In 1947 he was also Chairman of the Channel Tunnel Company, the later Eurotunnel.[3] The design of the Channel Tunnel and subsequent parts of the project were financed by the family bank.[4]
Like his ancestors, he devoted himself to the banking business. In 1919, Leo entered the family-owned Erlanger Bank, under the Chairmanship of his uncle, Baron Emile Beaumont d’Erlanger, becoming a partner in 1927, a Director in 1939, and finally chairman in 1944. Through the family bank, Leo was official banker to the Greek government.
In 1933, when Vogue proprietor Conde Nast was threatened with bankruptcy, Leo d’Erlanger arranged finance with Lord Camrose and enabled Nast to regain control of Vogue and Vanity Fair.[5]
In 1958, he oversaw the takeover of bank by the Merchant BankPhilip Hill Higginson under the leadership of their partner Kenneth Keith. The name of the bank was then changed to Philip Hill Higginson Erlanger Ltd.[11] However, there soon followed a falling out with Keith, (later Baron Keith of Castleacre) known for his aggressive business practices, who refused to accept Leo d'Erlanger as chairman of the group.[12] In 1965 the bank merged with private bank M Samuel to become Hill Samuel & Co,[13] which was subsequently taken over by TSB Group Plc. in 1987, which itself merged with Lloyds Bank to become Lloyds TSB in 1995.
Family and personal life
Baron Leo d'Erlanger, born in Hamilton Place, London, was the only child of painter and musicologistRodolphe François Baron d'Erlanger and his wife Maria Elisabetha Cleofee Scolastica Countess Barbiellini-Amidei, from old Tuscan nobility. Since his maternal grandfather Count Barbiellini-Amidei l'Elmi and had been chamberlain of Pope Leo XIII,[14] Pope Leo agreed to be godfather to Leo d'Erlanger and his namesake.
His paternal grandparents were the banker and railroad financier Frédéric Emile Baron d'Erlanger (1832-1911) and his American grandmother Marguérite Mathilde Slidell (the daughter of the influential American lawyer, businessman and Senator John Slidell). His maternal grandmother was American Harriet Lewis, born in New London, Connecticut.
Leo d'Erlanger spent most of his early childhood in France, but in 1910, due to his father's poor health, his parents moved to Sidi Bou Saïd in Tunisia and built the Ennejma Ezzahra Palace, which he later inherited.
In 1916, he attended Sandhurst Military Academy. Second Lieutenant Leo d’Erlanger joined the Grenadier Guards serving under Lieutenant Colonel Viscount Gort. From July to November 1918 he saw action on the Western Front and suffered shellshock.[17]
As a young man, d’Erlanger was a friend of Ettore Bugatti, owning several of his iconic models. His 1928 Bugatti Type 44 Fiacre later turned up among Michel Dovaz famous ‘sleeping beauties’.[18]
Baron Leo stated in his Will that he wished for his coffin to be carried on the first train to pass through the Channel Tunnel which was opened in 1994, however the authorities would not permit this.[19]
The couple lived at 44 Upper Grosvenor Street, Mayfair, London.[22] In 1935, Vogue told its readers that "the new house all London is talking about is Mrs. Leo d'Erlanger's in Upper Grosvenor Street, for it's unlike anything London has ever seen."[23]
Leo and Edwina left Great Britain in 1974 and lived between Geneva and their Palace, Ennejma Ezzahra, in Sidi Bou Saïd, northeast of Tunis,[24] where Leo invested in olive oil production.[25]
Descendants
Tess Edwina May Baroness d'Erlanger (1934-14 August 2008 in Spelsbury, Oxfordshire)
Leo Alexandre d'Erlanger-Bertrand (born 1963)
Oliver Alexander d'Erlanger-Bertrand (born 1992)
Louis Leo James d'Erlanger-Bertrand (born 2022)[26]
^Orbell, John. British Banking: A Guide to Historical Records.
^"The Telegraph, Lord Keith of Castleacre , Sept. 2, 2004".
^"Kirchholtes, Hans-Dieter: "Jewish private banks in Frankfurt am Main", Verlag Waldemar Kramer, Frankfurt am Main 1989, p. 52, ISBN 3-7829-0351-X". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)