You're reading: Baroness Reuter, last link to news dynasty, dies

LONDON (Reuters) - Marguerite, Baroness de Reuter, a European aristocrat from a bygone age and last survivor of the family that founded the international news agency, died on Sunday aged 96, friends said.

A patron of the arts, she was the widow of Oliver, 4th Baron de
Reuter, whose grandfather Paul Julius Reuter established his news
service in London in 1851 after starting out in Aachen, Germany, using
telegraph cables and carrier pigeons.

The barony — a German title granted to Paul Julius in 1871 but
later confirmed by Queen Victoria as conferring the privileges of the
nobility in England — becomes extinct on her death, as she and her
husband had no children.

“The name dies with her,” said her friend Michael Nelson, a former general manager of Reuters.

Another close friend, John Fox, said the baroness had suffered
successive strokes late last year. She died early on Sunday in a French
old people’s home on the border with Monaco.

He said Swiss-born Marguerite, a widow for more than 40 years, was
intensely proud of the family link with Reuters, and of the British
nationality she acquired through her husband.

Last year Reuters, which had already moved out of its historic
headquarters in London’s Fleet Street, the traditional home of the
British press, became part of Thomson Reuters Plc.

Thomson Reuters’ chief executive, Tom Glocer, said he was saddened to hear of the baroness’s death, adding:

“Although the founding family of Reuters were no longer significant
shareholders in the company, the baroness did notably attend a service
at St Bride’s Church, London, to mark Reuters’ historic move from Fleet
Street to Canary Wharf in 2OO5.”

Marguerite was born on July 14, 1912, the daughter of George
Uehlinger of Neunkirch, Switzerland. Friends remembered her as a
generous woman who spoke numerous languages, loved bridge, opera and
ballet, and enjoyed skiing until well into her 70s.

Known to her English friends as Daisy, she long divided her time between Monte Carlo and Lausanne.

“She was a very warm-hearted, hospitable person — generous,
philanthropic, a great supporter of the arts and music. She was always
immaculately turned out: elegant, refined and beautiful, with the most
angelic smile,” Fox said.

He said Marguerite would be cremated in Lausanne and her ashes
interred there with the remains of her husband, who died in 1968. The
couple married in 1937.

(Editing by Kevin Liffey)