Henri Alexandre Negresco (né Alexandru Negrescu; 14 March 1870 – 14 May 1920) was a Romanian hotelier and founder of the Hotel Negresco in Nice, France.[1] He died bankrupt after World War I, his hotel having been commandeered into a hospital during the war. During the 14 July 2016 attack on the Promenade des Anglais, Negresco's hotel once again became a field hospital used to aid victims.[2]
Early years and education
Alexandru Negrescu was born 14 March 1870, in Bucharest, Romania, to a half Jewish father, Jean Negrescu (born 1837), an innkeeper, and Maria Rădescu (born 1839).[3] The family had lived in Mihăileni, Botoșani County prior to Alexandru's birth.[1] He apprenticed with the confectioners Casa Capșa, in Bucharest, and Casa Boissier in Paris, settling in Paris by 1895, though he may have traveled there before that date as well.[1]
Career
Negrescu was known to have lived at No. 14 Rue des Saussaies, Paris, for many years. His first job in Paris was at a restaurant in the same building, owned by Rodolphe Schipper. He married Suzanne Bianca Rădescu (born November 15, 1874, Bucharest) on 6 July 1907.[1] They were known to have lived in Brussels, Belgium for a period, as their daughter, Germaine Henriette Hélène was born there on 4 December 1900. In 1909, Negresco became a French citizen.[1]
Negrescu moved to Monte-Carlo, working as a butler and then directing operations at Helder restaurant. He was also known to have worked at Londres, a restaurant-hotel,[1] and it was here that he showed his talent to care for and retain elite customers, including billionaires, kings and princes, such as the Vanderbilt and Rockefeller families, Basil Zaharoff, and Isaac Singer. After Charles Lefranc, a merchant of Nice, recommended Henri Negresco to Edouard Baudoin, the new concessionaire of the Nice Municipal Casino (1979 demolition), Negresco accepted a casino restaurant management position at a salary of 20,000 francs per year,[1]
See also
References
- L'histoire du Negresco, le plus bel hôtel de Nice Vanity Fair, 8 January 2019, retrieved 24 October 2019^
- Sarah Kaplan. Nice attack witnesses recall chaos; 'bodies, limbs and blood' The Washington Post, 15 July 2016, retrieved 15 July 2016^
- Hotelul unui român, transformat în spital de campanie