Helene Demuth | |
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Born |
Sankt Wendel, Principality of Lichtenberg, Duchy of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, German Confederation |
31 December 1820
Died | 4 November 1890 London, United Kingdom |
(aged 69)
Nationality | Prussian, German |
Known for | Housekeeper of Karl Marx, later serving as the household manager and political confidante of Frederich Engels. |
Frederick Lewis Demuth | |
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Born |
Henry Frederick Demuth June 23, 1851 London, United Kingdom |
Died | January 28, 1929 Upper Clapton, London, United Kingdom |
(aged 77)
Cause of death | Heart failure |
Nationality | English |
Occupation | Machinist |
Organization | Amalgamated Engineering Union |
Political party | Labour |
Children | Harry |
Parent(s) | Helene Demuth Frederick Engels (legal) Karl Marx (alleged) |
Helene "Lenchen" Demuth (1820-1890) was the housekeeper of Jenny and Karl Marx, later serving as the household manager and political confidante of Frederich Engels.
Helene Demuth was born of peasant parents on December 31, 1820 in Sankt Wendel in today's Saarland. As a teenage girl she was adopted into the von Westphalen household, to work as a maid. In 1843 Karl Marx married Jenny von Westphalen. Helene Demuth joined their household in April 1845 in Brussels, where she was sent by Jenny's mother. She stayed with the Marxes as a lifelong housekeeper, friend, and political confidante, and was commonly known to the family by the nicknames Lenchen or Nim.
After Marx's death in March 1883, Helene Demuth moved to Engels's home, where she ran the household. The pair worked in tandem to organize and arrange for the publication of Marx's literary remains.
In October 1890, Helene was diagnosed with cancer. She died in London on November 4 that year at the age of 69. In accordance with Jenny Marx's wishes, she was buried in the Marx family grave.
On June 23, 1851 Helene Demuth gave birth to a boy believed by most scholars to have been sired by Karl Marx. Presumably in an effort to preserve the Marxes' marriage, Karl Marx's closest personal friend, Frederick Engels, a bachelor living in Manchester, claimed fatherhood of the boy, who was given his name. The baby, Frederick Lewis Demuth (1851−1929), was placed in a working class foster home in London shortly after birth and was later trained as a toolmaker. His probable half-sister Eleanor Marx came to know him some time after her father's death and made him a family friend.
According to Terrell Carver, although it has been claimed since 1962 that Marx was the father of Helene Demuth's illegitimate son, "this is not well founded on the documentary materials available".