Elliott Fitch Shepard Jr.

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Elliott Fitch Shepard Jr.

Birth
New York, New York County, New York, USA
Death
10 Apr 1927 (aged 50)
Miami, Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA
Burial
New Dorp, Richmond County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.584988, Longitude: -74.1212916
Plot
Shepard Plot
Memorial ID
View Source
Sportsman, Adventurist, born to Elliott Fitch Shepard, Sr. and Margaret Louisa Vanderbilt Shepard, eldest daughter of William Henry Vanderbilt and Maria Louisa Kissam. Shepard was educated at Yale University and graduated in 1898. He later studied at Harvard University. Shepard married Esther Potter, a 25-year-old widow, in a civic marriage in April 1897. A religious ceremony followed at the insistence of Shepard's mother, after which the newlyweds left for Europe. Shepard went into business in Paris, but was unsuccessful. He briefly returned to the USA with his wife, but they separated and in August 1902, she filed for absolute divorce. Shepard again returned to Paris, and made several more attempts as opening businesses, all of which were again unsuccessful. Shepard knocked down and killed a 12-year-old girl, Madeline Marduel, on April 27, 1905. A trial followed, and on October 26 the judge sentenced Shepard to three months imprisonment, a $120 fine and he was ordered to pay $4,000 in damages to the girls' parents. Shepard appealed the decision, and the case was eventually settled in January 1907, with a reduced sentence of six weeks imprisonment. After nine days in Fresnes prison, Shepard was pardoned after paying a further $2000. In the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup, a race started in 1904 by his cousin, William Kissam Vanderbilt II, Shepard lost control of his Hotchkiss HH car and hit two spectators who were killed in the incident. Unaware of what had happened, Shepard continued until reaching the service area at East Norwich. Here he learnt from his mechanic that his car may have collided with someone, and a telephone call to the race organizers confirmed what had happened. Upon hearing this, Shepard withdrew from the event. Shepard was injured in 1907 when he drove into a river in Monte Carlo after a tire on his car became detached and sent the car bouncing over the bridge railing moving a further five yards into the river. He broke his collarbone with other slight injuries to his body. During World War I, Shepard worked in a hospital for American volunteers for the French army in Chantilly, France. His work helped him to receive the Knight of the Legion de Honneur, the Croix de Guerre and the American Field Service Medal. Shepard died on April 10, 1927 at his Miami beach estate from cancer of the esophagus. His body was shipped to Frank E. Campbell, after his funeral services he was buried in the Shepard Family Plot in the Vanderbilt Cemetery on Staten Island.

Bio by: Bobby Kelley
Sportsman, Adventurist, born to Elliott Fitch Shepard, Sr. and Margaret Louisa Vanderbilt Shepard, eldest daughter of William Henry Vanderbilt and Maria Louisa Kissam. Shepard was educated at Yale University and graduated in 1898. He later studied at Harvard University. Shepard married Esther Potter, a 25-year-old widow, in a civic marriage in April 1897. A religious ceremony followed at the insistence of Shepard's mother, after which the newlyweds left for Europe. Shepard went into business in Paris, but was unsuccessful. He briefly returned to the USA with his wife, but they separated and in August 1902, she filed for absolute divorce. Shepard again returned to Paris, and made several more attempts as opening businesses, all of which were again unsuccessful. Shepard knocked down and killed a 12-year-old girl, Madeline Marduel, on April 27, 1905. A trial followed, and on October 26 the judge sentenced Shepard to three months imprisonment, a $120 fine and he was ordered to pay $4,000 in damages to the girls' parents. Shepard appealed the decision, and the case was eventually settled in January 1907, with a reduced sentence of six weeks imprisonment. After nine days in Fresnes prison, Shepard was pardoned after paying a further $2000. In the 1906 Vanderbilt Cup, a race started in 1904 by his cousin, William Kissam Vanderbilt II, Shepard lost control of his Hotchkiss HH car and hit two spectators who were killed in the incident. Unaware of what had happened, Shepard continued until reaching the service area at East Norwich. Here he learnt from his mechanic that his car may have collided with someone, and a telephone call to the race organizers confirmed what had happened. Upon hearing this, Shepard withdrew from the event. Shepard was injured in 1907 when he drove into a river in Monte Carlo after a tire on his car became detached and sent the car bouncing over the bridge railing moving a further five yards into the river. He broke his collarbone with other slight injuries to his body. During World War I, Shepard worked in a hospital for American volunteers for the French army in Chantilly, France. His work helped him to receive the Knight of the Legion de Honneur, the Croix de Guerre and the American Field Service Medal. Shepard died on April 10, 1927 at his Miami beach estate from cancer of the esophagus. His body was shipped to Frank E. Campbell, after his funeral services he was buried in the Shepard Family Plot in the Vanderbilt Cemetery on Staten Island.

Bio by: Bobby Kelley