On Friday, May 7, 1915, during World War One, a German U-Boat torpedoed the Cunard ocean liner RMS Lusitania eleven miles off the coast of Ireland. The vessel caught fire and sank in eighteen minutes. Only 723 passengers and crew survived. Killed were 1,198 passengers and crew, including 128 Americans. Among them was Victor E. Shields, a prominent Cincinnati liquor dealer, and his wife Retta.

Forty-five years earlier Victor had been born in Charleston, West Virginia, the son of Fredericka (nee Scheldesheim) and Joseph Shields. When he was only a toddler, his father moved the family to Cincinnati, where Victor was joined by a brother, Percy, in 1874 and a sister, Rosa, in 1877. About 1873 his father with a partner set up a Cincinnati wine and spirits company called Shields, May & Co., located at 17 Sycamore Street.


In 1896, Victor wed Retta Cohen in Hamilton, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati. He was 26, she was 24. Their marriage would be childless. About the same time as his marriage, he joined his father’s liquor firm, taking over the business when Joseph decided to invest his time and money in other enterprises, subsequently founding the Shields Oil & Gas Company. Victor lost little time in renaming the organization V.E. Shields & Company, eventually moving from Main Street to 117-121 East Pearl, as shown on his letterhead.



The sudden deaths of his son and daughter-in-law seemingly dealt a crushing blow to Joseph Shields, now 81. He had been involved in the couple’s planning for the trip, writing a letter of endorsement to accompany their passport application. Moreover, death also had come to the family only a year earlier when his second son, Percy, 40 years old, had died. Still an officer of the Shields liquor firm, Joseph shut it down after some fifty years in business. Less than a year after the sinking of the Lusitania, perhaps burdened with sorrow, Joseph himself died in 1916 at age 82 and was buried in the family plot.
The story does not end there. International law dictated that the heirs of any citizens of non-belligerent countries killed in warfare must be compensated. Although German authorities initially rejected that responsibility, after World War One a defeated Germany provided the U.S. with a large settlement to be divided up among families of the dead. The Joint U.S.-German Commission designated to make the payments was petitioned by the Shields’ estate for compensation. The prospect of “blood” money, however, set Victor’s next of kin at odds with Retta’s. The Commission in its 1924 judgment described their conflicting appeals:
“It is urged that as Mr. Shields was two years older than his wife, she would, but for the wrongful act of Germany in sinking the Lusitania, have probably survived him and would then under his will have inherited his entire estate…and that her next of kin would have ultimately benefitted thereby.
“On the other hand, Mr. Shields’ next of kin urge that his ‘wife having perished with him on the Lusitania, there is no room for doubt that if he had survived,’ he, being then without wife or children, would have been generous in his contributions to them.”
In making its decision, the Commission noted the wealth of the couple. Victor had an annual income equivalent today to about $200,000 year and left an estate equivalent to $2.8 million. On the same scale, Retta’s estate was worth an additional $600,000. The Commission noted that because none of the claimants had suffered losses as a result of the deaths of the Shields [and in fact already had benefited from their inheritances] their claims furnished “no sound basis on which to rest a award.” The relatives got nary a pfennig of Lusitania compensation.
It is unclear whether the bodies of Victor and Retta were recovered. Not long before he died, Joseph Shields arranged for gravestones for Victor and Retta to be installed at the Walnut Hills Cemetery in Hamilton County. Shown above, they remain a reminder of the Shields’ personal tragedy, one among many, that ultimately led to U.S. participation in World War One.
My husband is a descendant of Victor's sister, Virginia. According to the Erik Larson book, Dead Wake, Victor's body washed up on a beach in Ireland and was buried there, then exhumed and sent to the US for an autopsy. The family's thinking is there was an attempt to determine whether Victor or Retta had died first to determine which family would inherit the estate.
ReplyDeleteResearch Baron: I think you are right about an effort to determine which of the Shields couple might have died first. Greed makes people do funny things.
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