by Scott Mehl © Unofficial Royalty 2019
Nancy Stewart Worthington Leeds was the first wife of Prince Christopher of Greece and Denmark. She was born Nonie May Stewart on January 20, 1878, in Zanesville, Ohio, the daughter of William Charles Stewart and Mary Holden. She was educated privately at home, and then attended Miss Porter’s School in Farmington, Connecticut. Nonie was married three times.
Her first marriage, to George Ely Worthington, took place in Cleveland, Ohio on October 1, 1894. Nonie was just 16 at the time but listed her age as 18 on her marriage certificate. Her husband was the grandson of a wealthy industrialist and the couple lived very comfortably in Cleveland. They had no children, and the couple separated in 1899.
The following year, on August 3, 1900 – three days after her divorce from George Worthington was final – May (as she was now known) married William Bateman Leeds. Leeds, known as the “Tin King” had amassed a vast fortune in the tin industry. A former florist, William later joined with several partners to open the American Tin Plate Company. They sold that company to the United States Steel Corporation in 1898 for about 40 million dollars and then invested much of their profits in the railroad industry. Upon their marriage, William gave May jewelry valued well over a million dollars and a mansion on Fifth Avenue in New York City valued at over 2 million dollars. Two years later, the couple welcomed their only child:
- William Bateman Leeds, Jr (1902) – married Princess Xenia Georgievna of Russia, had issue, divorced
After just eight years of marriage, May’s husband died in Paris, France in June 1908, leaving a fortune of nearly 40 million dollars. Now a very wealthy woman, Nancy May Leeds (as she was now known) became a prominent member of European high society.
It was while visiting Biarritz, France in 1914 that Nancy met Prince Christopher, the youngest child of King George I of the Hellenes and Grand Duchess Olga Konstantinovna of Russia. According to Christopher’s memoirs, the two quickly fell in love and decided to marry. Their engagement was first announced in 1914, but it would be six years before they married. There was much reservation within the Greek royal family over the bride being an American and already married twice. In addition, the monarchy was facing considerable upheaval with the onset of World War I. Finally, the couple was married in an Orthodox ceremony on February 1, 1920, in Vevey, Switzerland. Several days after the marriage, Nancy converted to Orthodoxy and took the name Anastasia.
A year after their marriage, Anastasia’s son married Christopher’s niece Princess Xenia Georgievna of Russia. Xenia is perhaps best known for being a major supporter of Anna Anderson – the woman who claimed to be the Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia. Xenia took Anna Anderson into her home and believed she was actually Anastasia.
Not long after her marriage to Christopher, Anastasia was diagnosed with cancer. She died on August 29, 1923, at Spencer House in London, England. Per her wishes, her remains were interred alongside her parents in the Stewart family mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York City.
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