of Capel dancing with Chanel Born in Brighton, Sussex, Capel was the son of Arthur Joseph Capel, a British shipping merchant, and his French-born wife, the former Berthe Andrée A. E. Lorin (1856–1902). He had three sisters: Marie Henriette Teresia Capel, Mary Josephine Lawrence Edith Capel and Berthe Isabelle Susanna Flora Capel. Berthe married Sir Herman Alfred de Stern, Baron Michelham, the son of
Herbert Stern, 1st Baron Michelham. His father's elder brother was Monsignor
Thomas John Capel, a Roman Catholic priest of the
Archdiocese of Westminster who was mired in scandal during the 1880s. In the obituary of one of Capel's daughters, An alumnus of
Beaumont College, he was a shipping merchant and already an apparently wealthy
self-made man by 1909. In the
1919 New Year Honours, Capel, as political assistant secretary to the British Section of the
Supreme War Council, Versailles, was appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE). Capel was killed in an automobile accident on 22 December 1919, supposedly en route to a Christmas rendezvous with Chanel. He was buried with full military honours at
Fréjus Cathedral on 24 December 1919. A roadside memorial was placed at the site of the accident, consisting of a cross bearing the inscription: "''A la mémoire du capitaine Arthur Capel, légion d'Honneur de l'armée britannique, mort accidentellement en cet endroit le 22 décembre 1919.''" The memorial is said to have been commissioned by Chanel. Twenty-five years after the event, Chanel, then residing in Switzerland, confided to her friend,
Paul Morand, "His death was a terrible blow to me. In losing Capel, I lost everything. What followed was not a life of happiness, I have to say." ==Capel and Chanel==