Singer was born in 1863 in
Yonkers, New York, to
Isaac Singer, the founder of the
Singer Sewing Machine Company, and his wife
Isabella Eugénie Boyer, a French model. He was the couple's first child, though Isaac had at least eighteen children by several previous wives and mistresses. Shortly after his birth, his parents moved from New York to Paris, and then, following the outbreak of the
Franco-Prussian War in 1870, to
Oldway Mansion in Devon, England. His father died in 1875 and the children, with their mother, inherited substantial wealth of 13 million dollars. He was the eldest of Isabella's children; he had three brothers and two sisters. Of these, his sister
Winnaretta married into the
French nobility and became a patron of the arts, while his brother
Washington was a philanthropist and racehorse owner. Singer matriculated at
Downing College, Cambridge, in October 1881; his younger brother,
Paris, would later study for a brief period at
Caius College. Singer left the university without taking a degree. While originally born an American citizen, he was naturalised as a British subject in 1900. He married Mary Maund in 1888, daughter of John Oxley of Maldon, Yorkshire. Secondly, he married Aline Madeline Charlotte Pilavione in 1913, daughter of Etienne of Biarritz. He left the bulk of his assets to his widow Aline, but it appears he had no children. ==Later life==