Background
Helene Demuth was born of peasant parents on December 31, 1820 in Sankt Wendel in today"s Saarland.
Helene Demuth was born of peasant parents on December 31, 1820 in Sankt Wendel in today"s Saarland.
She is best remembered as the mother of a child believed by most scholars to have been fathered by Marx. As a teenage girl she was adopted into the von Westphalen household, to work as a maid. In 1843 Karl Marx married Jenny von Westphalen.
Helene Demuth joined their household in April 1845 in Brussels, where she was sent by Jenny"s mother.
She stayed with the Marxes as a lifelong housekeeper, friend, and political confidante, and was commonly known to the family by the nicknames Lenchen or Nim. After Marx"s death in March 1883, Helene Demuth moved to Engels"s home, where she ran the household.
The pair worked in tandem to organize and arrange for the publication of Marx"s literary remains. In October 1890, Helene was diagnosed with cancer.
She died in London on November 4 that year at the age of 69.
In accordance with Jenny Marx"s wishes, she was buried in the Marx family grave. Frederick Demuth
On June 23, 1851 Helene Demuth gave birth to a boy believed by most scholars to have been sired by Karl Marx. The baby, Frederick Lewis Demuth (1851−1929), was placed in a working class foster home in London shortly after birth and was later trained as a toolmaker.
According to Terrell Carver, although it has been claimed since 1962 that Marx was the father of Helene Demuth"s illegitimate son, "this is not well founded on the documentary materials available.