William Kissam Vanderbilt | |
Birth Date: | December 12, 1849 |
Birth Place: | New Dorp, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Occupation: | Horse breeder |
Parents: | William Henry Vanderbilt Maria Louisa Kissam |
Spouse: | |
Children: | |
Relatives: | Herbert M. Harriman (brother-in-law) |
Signature: | Appletons' Vanderbilt Cornelius (capitalist) - William Kissam signature.png |
William Kissam Vanderbilt I (December 12, 1849 – July 22, 1920[1]) was an American heir, businessman, philanthropist and horsebreeder. Born into the Vanderbilt family, he managed his family's railroad investments.
William Kissam Vanderbilt I was born on December 12, 1849, in New Dorp, New York, on Staten Island. His parents were Maria Louisa Kissam and William Henry Vanderbilt, the eldest son of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, an heir to his fortune and a prominent member of the Vanderbilt family who was the richest American after he took over his father's fortune in 1877 until his own death in 1885.[2]
He was the third of eight children born to his parents. His siblings were Cornelius Vanderbilt II, Margaret Louisa Vanderbilt, Emily Thorn Vanderbilt, Florence Adele Vanderbilt, Frederick William Vanderbilt, Eliza Osgood Vanderbilt, and George Washington Vanderbilt II.
Vanderbilt inherited $55 million (equal to about $ billion today) from his father in 1885. He managed his family railroad investments. In 1879, after taking over P. T. Barnum's Great Roman Hippodrome which was on railroad property by Madison Square Park, he renamed the facility Madison Square Garden.[3]
Vanderbilt was one of the founders of The Jockey Club. He was a shareholder and president of the Sheepshead Bay Race Track in Brooklyn, New York, and the owner of a successful racing stable. In 1896, he built the American Horse Exchange at 50th Street (Manhattan) and Broadway. In 1911 he leased it (and eventually sold it to) the Shubert Organization who then transformed it into the Winter Garden Theatre.[4]
After his divorce from Alva, he moved to France where he built a château and established the Haras du Quesnay horse racing stable and breeding farm near Deauville in France's famous horse region of Lower Normandy. Among the horses he owned was the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame filly Maskette, purchased from Castleton Farm in Lexington, Kentucky, for broodmare services at his French breeding farm.Vanderbilt's horses won a number of important races in France including:
On April 20, 1875, Vanderbilt married his first wife, Alva Erskine Smith, daughter of Murray Forbes Smith and Phoebe Ann Desha.[5] Together, they had three children:
Alva later coerced Consuelo into marrying Charles Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough on November 6, 1895.[6] Alva divorced Vanderbilt in March 1895, at a time when divorce was rare among the elite, and received a large financial settlement reported to be in excess of $10 million (equal to about $ million today). The grounds for divorce were allegations of Vanderbilt's adultery. Indeed, one account of cheating on his wife was with none other than the Duchess of Manchester, Consuelo Yznaga, also known as his wife's best friend. Alva remarried to one of their old family friends, Oliver Hazard Perry Belmont, on January 11, 1896.[5]
In 1903, Vanderbilt married Anne Harriman, daughter of banker Oliver Harriman.[7] She was a widow to sportsman Samuel Stevens Sands and to Lewis Morris Rutherfurd Jr., son of the astronomer Lewis Morris Rutherfurd. Her second husband had died in Switzerland in 1901. She had two sons by her first marriage and two daughters by her second marriage. She had no children by Vanderbilt.[8]
Like other prominent Vanderbilts, he built magnificent houses. His residences included Idle Hour (1900) on Long Island and Marble House (1892), designed by Richard Morris Hunt, in Newport, Rhode Island. Hunt also designed Vanderbilt's 660 Fifth Avenue mansion (1883).[9] In 1907, Vanderbilt and his second wife built Château Vanderbilt, a Louis XIII style manor house along with three thoroughbred race tracks in Carrières-sous-Poissy, an hour outside Paris and on the route to Deauville, famous for its horse racing.
Vanderbilt was a co-owner of the yacht Defender, which won the 1895 America's Cup and briefly owned the large steam yacht Consuelo. Vanderbilt was a founder and president of the New Theatre.
Vanderbilt made significant charitable contributions to Vanderbilt University, a private university in Nashville, Tennessee, named for his grandfather.[10]
Vanderbilt died in Paris on July 22, 1920.[1] His remains were brought home and interred in the Vanderbilt family mausoleum in New Dorp, Staten Island, New York.[11]
Vanderbilt's portrait, painted by F. W. Wright from an original painting by Richard Hall between 1911 and 1921, was donated to Vanderbilt University in 1921; it is hung in Kirkland Hall.[12]
Founding member of the Jekyll Island Club aka The Millionaires Club on Jekyll Island, Georgia.[13]
Contemporary estimates reported in newspapers in August 1920 speculated that the total estate of Vanderbilt was between $40,000,000 to $100,000,000. The law firm Anderson & Anderson published a summary of the contents of Vanderbilt’s Will, which included:
No provision was made as to the appointment of the $5,000,000 Trust he had received under his father’s Will, which was distributed to his three children in equal shares as per the Terms of the Trust.[14]
The Gross Value of the Estate was reported to be $54,530,966.59 following the decree fixing the income tax payable in the Suffolk County Surrogate’s Court on 6 March 1923.[15] His sons William Vanderbilt Jr and Harold Vanderbilt received $21,252,757.38 and $21,739,867.38 respectively after the deduction of all debts, expenses, administration, attorney’s fees, and the levying of New York State Estate Tax of $1,934,571.73 and Federal Estate Tax of $11,459,290.16.
Contemporary reports also suggest that Vanderbilt gifted $15,000,000 to his daughter Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan, and $1,000,000 each to her sons The Marquess of Blandford and Lord Ivor Churchill several months prior to his death.[16]