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  1. Eleanor Post Hutton (1909-2006), née Close, est une riche héritière américaine. Née Close, elle prend le nom de Hutton à la suite du remariage de sa mère, en 1920, avec Edward Francis Hutton. (fr) Eleanor Close Barzin (December 3, 1909 – November 27, 2006) was an American heiress and socialite. Born a "Close", her name changed to ...

  2. New York, April 14 (AP)--Eleanor Post Hutton, 29, heiress granddaughter of the late C. W. Post, cereal manufacturer, was on a runaway honeymoon today as the bride of Preston Sturgis, playwright. In the face of opposition to the match by her mother, the former Marjorie Post, and her stepfather, Edward F. Hutton, the couple eloped Saturday and ...

  3. Eleanor Post Hutton (Q5354365) Eleanor Post Hutton. American heiress, art collector and socialite. Eleanor Post Close. edit. Language. Label. Description. Also known as.

  4. Eleanor Close Hutton Barzin died in Paris on November 27, 2006 and was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, after a service at Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens. She was survived by her son Antal Miklas Post de Bekessy, her granddaughter Laetitia Vere as well as her half-sister actress Dina Merrill and two half-brothers Edward B. Close, Jr., and William B. Close.

  5. Eleanor Post Hutton: American heiress, art collector and socialite (1909 - 2006), Socialite, Art collector, From: United States of America

  6. Eleanor Post Hutton Biography. Eleanor Close Barzin (December 3, 1909 – November 27, 2006) was an American heiress and socialite. Born a Close, her name changed to Hutton with her mother's 1920 marriage to Edward Francis Hutton. However, after her marriage to Leon Barzin her name became Eleanor Close Barzin, and stayed that way through the ...

  7. 14 de nov. de 2023 · The heiress also put her jewelry in a safe and used the saved insurance money to create the Marjorie Post Hutton Canteen for women and children. E.F., however, thought little of her charitable acts, disapproved of Roosevelt’s relief efforts, and even criticized the president in an essay in the Detroit Free Press for “adopting as his own the rabble-rousing battle cry of ‘soaking the rich