Howard Sturges was born on December 23, 1884, in Providence, Rhode Island.[1] He was the son of Howard Okie Sturges (1845–1920), a manufacturer of cotton,[2] and Alice Spring Knight (1853–1930). He was an old-money New England socialite who trained as a violinist.[3] After grade school and high school in Providence, he attended the Groton School in Massachusetts, then entered Yale University, where he graduated with an A.B. in the class of 1908.[4][2] Before moving to Paris to study music he played the violin for the New Haven Symphony.[2] He was an eccentric. He kept a pet bear and walked a pig on a leash through the streets of Paris.[3][2]
He was a volunteer in Paris during World War I.[2] During the war he served first as a member of the American Relief Clearing House Headquarters in Paris, and later as secretary to Oscar Beatte in the American Red Cross. His services were rewarded by official recognition from the French government.[4]
In the 1920s Sturges was associated with Beatte in business in Paris. He was a member of the Agawam Hunt Club, and the Rhode Island Yale Alumni Association.[4]
He moved back to the United States during World War II and lived at East 64 Street, New York.[2]
He died on October 7, 1955, in Paris. His nephew was Rowland Sturges, a concert pianist and teacher.[6]