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Charles S von Stade

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Died
  
April 10, 1945

Name
  
Charles von

Occupation
  
Polo player

Nationality
  
American


Born
  
November 24, 1919
Westbrook, South Africa

Residence
  
New York & New Jersey, USA

Spouse(s)
  
Sara Worthington Clucas

Children
  
Charles Steele von Stade jr.:Frederica von Stade

Parents
  
Francis Skiddy von Stade, Sr.

Resting place
  
Netherlands American Cemetery, Eijsden-Margraten

Cause of death
  
Killed in Action, WWII

Charles Steele von Stade (November 24, 1919–April 10, 1945) was an American polo champion.

Contents

Personal life

Charles Steele von Stade was born in Westbrook (Westville), Kwazulu Natal, South Africa on November 24, 1919 to Francis Skiddy von Stade, Sr. (1884–1967) and Kathryn Nevitt Steele (1896–1981). He was raised in Saratoga Springs, New York, and trained as an architect. He married Sara Worthington Clucas (1918–1983) in Gladstone, New Jersey on January 24, 1942.

Polo

In 1941, together with John H. H. Phipps, Michael Grace Phipps and Alan L. Corey, Jr., he won the U.S. Open Polo Championship at the Meadow Brook Polo Club against the Westbury team (Gerald Dempsey, Earle Hopping, Stewart Iglehart and Windsor Holden White).

Military service

Von Stade enlisted in the United States Army in March 1942, achieving rank of First Lieutenant. While fighting to liberate Europe from the Nazi regime in the Second World War, he was killed in action in Germany on April 10, 1945 when his Jeep ran over a land mine. He is buried at the Netherlands American Cemetery and Memorial in Eijsden-Margraten, Netherlands.

Elegies

During his time in service, Charles von Stade wrote several heart-felt letters to his wife, who was pregnant with their only child. Their daughter, Frederica von Stade, was born after he was killed in World War II, and grew to become an internationally renowned opera singer. She had long wished to turn some of the letters by her father into a song cycle. Eventually some of his words and expressions were fashioned into poems by Kim Vaeth and in 1997, Richard Danielpour completed composition of the music. The resulting work, entitled Elegies, was a cycle of songs for mezzo-soprano, baritone, and chamber orchestra, which was performed at Carnegie Hall. According to Classics Today, "The five songs form a sort of a conversation across the gulf of time between father and daughter. The text alludes to their separation, longing for each other, and their eventual reconciliation on the spiritual plane."

Elegies has been recorded by Sony Masterworks, with Frederica von Stade, Thomas Hampson, and the London Philharmonic Orchestra and Perspectives Ensemble conducted by Roger Nierenberg.

References

Charles S. von Stade Wikipedia


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