Moritz Karl Ferdinand Wilhelm Hermann Walther Mumm von Schwarzenstein (13 January 1887 – 10 August 1959) was a German businessman and bobsledder who competed in the early 1930s. He was the one-time "champagne king" of Rheims in France, as part of the Mumm champagne making family.
Early life
Von Mumm was born in Frankfurt am Main in 1887, son to Peter Arnold Gottlieb Hermann Mumm von Schwarzenstein and Emma Luise Marie Passavant.[1]
Von Mumm returned to Germany at the outbreak of World War I. As his champagne winery was confiscated by the French, von Mumm sacrificed the prosperous 100-plus-year-old family business. After the war, von Mumm salvaged little of his fortune, and lost what remained in the 1929 Wall Street crash. Thus, the "champagne king" saw his fortunes wither until he was living in a $10-a-week Manhattan boarding house.
While in the U.S., he met Frances Scoville, daughter of Mary Lincoln (née Bergen) Scoville and Courtney C. K. Scoville, a Kansas lawyer and banker.[4] They were married at St George's, Hanover Square in London in June 1913 and she was given away by her brother-in-law, Louis S. Treadwell. Guests at the wedding included Anthony Joseph Drexel III, the Earl and Countess of Portarlington, Count György Festetics, Chauncey McKeever and Mrs. Charles B. Wright.[5] Before her death in France in 1920, they were the parents of one daughter:
Mary Mumm von Schwarzenstein (1915-1938), who was educated at a school in Aiken, South Carolina; she died in an automobile accident together with her aunt, Josephine Scoville Treadwell.
Between meeting and marrying Frances Scoville, von Mumm became involved with Marie Van Rensimer,[6] a former waitress from Philadelphia known for her wealthy lovers and admirers.[7] After he became engaged to Scoville in 1912, he traveled from St. Moritz to Paris to tell Marie who shot him in his left lung her at her Paris apartment. Society barrister Oliver Bodington represented Mrs. Van Rensimer Barnes.[8]
In 1931, he tried to take his own life by shooting himself above the heart in the Long Island home of his old friend William H. vom Rath.[10] His suicide note read: "Bury me as I am and keep this out of the newspapers." Von Mumm rallied and recovered.[11]