Henry Wikoff


Henry Wikoff , known as the Chevalier Wikoff, was an American traveler, writer and diplomat.
Wikoff was born in Philadelphia, the illegitimate son of a doctor who owned Blockley Township, Pennsylvania. Despite his birth status, he inherited a sizable fortune, which enabled him to travel extensively in Europe. He graduated from Union College in 1831, and then attended the College of New Jersey. He was admitted to the bar in Pennsylvania in 1834.
That same year, Wikoff then went to Europe, where he acted as a diplomatic agent for the United States, Britain, and France at different times, and even spent some time in prison in Italy. In 1852, after a sensational trial in front of the High Court of Genoa, he and a conspirator, Frenchman Louis Vannaud, were sentenced to 15 months in prison for attempting to force an heiress, Miss G. C. Gamble, into marriage in order to gain access to her fortune. Upon returning to America, he was responsible for the successful tour by famous dancer Fanny Elssler in 1840. Wikoff became a close friend of First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln, which created some scandalous gossip.
He was friendly with the Bonaparte royal family in France, and was awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor by Napoleon III, which gave him the title of Chevalier, and was made Knight Commander of the Royal Order of Isabella the Catholic, by the King of Spain in 1871. He acted as an undercover reporter for the New York Herald, making use of his presence in government circles.
Wikoff died 28 April 1884 in Brighton, Sussex, England, age 72 or 74.

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