Sir Anthony Nathan de Rothschild, 1st Baronet was a British financier and a member of the prominent Rothschild banking family of England.
Background
Born in New Court, Street Swithin"s Lane, in the City of London, Anthony de Rothschild was the third child and second son of Nathan Mayer Rothschild and Hanna Barent Cohen. She was a cousin, the daughter of Henriette Rothschild (1791–1866) and Abraham Montefiore. On his father"s death in 1836, Anthony became a partner in the bank.
Education
Multilingual, he studied at the University of Göttingen in Germany and the University of Strasbourg in France.
Career
He then went to work for North M Rothschild & Sons in London and was sent to train at de Rothschild Frères in Paris and M A Rothschild & Söhne in Frankfurt. In 1840 Anthony Nathan de Rothschild married Louise Montefiore (1821–1910). They had two daughters: Constance (1843–1931) Annie Henrietta (1844–1926) Anthony"s eldest brother Lionel de Rothschild worked at the bank but in time became more and more involved in politics.
Anthony Rothschild"s involvement with the financing of European railways was extensive and included the Chemins de fer de Paris à Lyon et à la Méditerranée, the Imperial Lombardo Venetian and Central Italian Railway Company of which brother Lionel was a director as well as funding railroad construction in Brazil.
In the 1840s he was involved with their investment in an ironworks in Mexico that supplied product for the building of that country"s railway system. In addition, he was part of the 1852 negotiations for the lease whereby the Rothschilds took over the running of the Royal Mint Refinery in London and took charge of overseeing the operation.
Private He acquired several pieces of exceedingly rare faience from France. He owned paintings such as "Portrait of a Manitoba as the God Mars" by Peter Paul Rubens and "The Dispatch of the Messenger" by François Boucher.
In the early 1850s, Anthony de Rothschild acquired Aston Clinton House, an estate in Aston Clinton near Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire.
He had been raised in London and although he maintained an opulent home at Grosvenor Place, he preferred country living where he liked to ride horses and participate in the hunt. At his stables he raised Thoroughbred racehorses, producing a number of successful winners on the track. A philanthropist, his support for various causes included an endowment of an infants school at Aston Clinton.
He was also active in the London Jewish community, supporting the Jews" Free School and was the first president of the United Synagogue upon its formation in 1870.
Anthony Nathan de Rothschild died in 1876 at Woolston, Hampshire and was interred in the Willesden Jewish Cemetery.
Membership
Like other members of the Rothschild family, Anthony was a dedicated collector of art and antiquities, making purchases from dealers across Europe.