For other people named James Thornton, see James Thornton.
James Worth Thornton (September 19, 1906 – February 6, 1983, Virginia) was an American businessman and scion of the politically and socially connected Thorntons of Indiana.[1] Thornton also appeared in the journals of noted essayist Edmund Wilson.[2]
Early life
Thornton was born into a prominent family in the railroad business and enjoyed a privileged childhood. He was the son of Sir Henry Worth Thornton and Virginia Blair (daughter of banker and steel magnate George Dike Blair).[3]
While working in Europe, Thornton earned a reputation as an international playboy:[5] he was reportedly an excellent polo player and prominent in social circles. While working for a firm in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1931, he married Baroness Elena Mumm von Schwarzenstein. After their marriage, Thornton served as Vice-President of the Mumm family's American Incorporation.[6]
In 1931 Thornton married Helene-Marthe "Elena" Mumm von Schwarzenstein,[7] a German-Russian-French aristocrat and partial heir to the Mumm champagne fortune.[8] Her maternal relations (the Struve family[9]) were prominent Russian diplomats and astronomers.[10] Before their divorce, James and Elena were the parents of one son:
Shortly after marriage, James and Elena moved to Montreal and, then, to New York City, where Elena served as an assistant editor for Town & Country (magazine). While working as an editor, Elena met Edmund Wilson, the prominent author and critic, and fell in love.[12] In 1946, Elena and Edmund fled to Reno, Nevada, divorced their respective spouses, and married, creating a minor media sensation. Elena Mumm Thornton was Edmund Wilson’s fourth wife.[13]