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Private tutors educated the Coes' only daughter, Natalie Mai,
until adolescence when she attended the Foxcroft School in Virginia.
She was graduated from the Spence School in New York City in 1930
and made her New York debut that same year, having been presented
to the Court of St. James in 1929.
On May 19, 1934, Natalie Mai Coe married Commendatore Leonardo
Vitetti of Italy. The
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spectacular wedding at Planting Fields was an international
event, featured in a Pathé newsreel of the time. The ceremony
was held at noon in the Great Hall of the mansion that had been
transformed into a floral chapel. Natalie wore a gown of antique
ivory satin with a cowl and long, tight sleeves that fell over her
hands. The bridegroom wore his diplomatic uniform with many decorations,
adding to the brilliance of the scene. |
The titles of "Count" and "Countess" were bestowed
upon the Vitettis in 1938 by the Italian government for notable service.
Among his other diplomatic positions, Count Vitetti was the Italian
ambassador to the United Nations between 1950 and 1956. The Vitettis
had one son, Ernesto, who resides in Rome, Italy. Natalie was a Trustee
of the Planting Fields Foundation until her death in 1987.
She was a notable horsewoman, and a collector of books on cooking and
culinary history.
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