Category: Uncategorized
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The Roosevelts and The Livingstons: Centuries of Intertwining

The Livingston family and the Roosevelt family have been linked by business and marriage for centuries going back to the 1790’s when Chancellor Robert R. Livingston worked with Nicholas Roosevelt to invent a practical steamboat. The familial relationship to the Livingstons is even more fascinating though. Elliott Roosevelt (1860-1894), President Theodore Roosevelt’s younger brother,…
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Making the Worst Situation Worse: The Cruelty Of Naming Enslaved People
The institution of slavery was dehumanizing for the enslaved. It had to be. In order to keep the belief that the people held in bondage were less than, their enslavers had to treat them as subhuman. One of the ways that they did this was to name the enslaved. It was an attempt to…
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Dr. William Wilson: Inoculations, Health Insurance and Bleeding in Clermont

William Wilson was born in 1756. Where is a bit of mystery. Some sources have him born in Scotland, other sources list his birth place as Wooler, Northumberland, England, which is very close to the Scottish border. His father was Reverend Alexander Wilson, the presbyterian minister for Wooler. William graduated from the University of…
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Gerrit Smith: Philanthropy, Abolition, and Treason

Gerrit Smith was born on March 6, 1797. And yes, before you ask, he was a Livingston. Through his mother, Elizabeth, he was the great – great- grandson of Robert “the nephew” Livingston. Robert “the nephew” was the son of Robert Livingston, the First Lord of Livingston Manor’s brother James. The younger Robert arrived in…
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David Crosby of the Manor Livingstons

The recent passing of singer/song writer David Crosby was sad, and we of course extend our deepest sympathies to his family, but his something about his passing did catch my attention. Several outlets used his full name in his obituary, which was David van Cortlandt Crosby. This got me thinking, was there a chance that…
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Privateers: John R. Livingston and the Investment That Helped Win the War

During the American Revolution hundreds of American fishing and merchant vessels had their hulls strengthened, cannons mounted, and their crew sizes increased. With a letter of marque in hand these ships went privateering. These ships attacked British merchant vessels and even small British navy ships. Successfully captured ships were sent back to American ports where…
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Dr. Thomas Thompson: Regimental Surgeon

When the Revolutionary War broke out the Americans had to build an army from the ground up. One of the positions they realized that the new regiments would need was the regimental surgeon. These doctors would take care of the illnesses that often ravaged armies and treat wounds until the soldiers could be carried to…
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Full House: George And Martha Washington Visit Clermont

George Washington and Martha Washington visited Clermont in the summer of 1783. George was on his way to visit the northern theater of the war and Martha would be staying with Margaret Beekman Livingston while George was in the north. When this incident is talked about at the site it is told as “George and…
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John Lawrence Livingston and Saratoga: A Revolutionary War Mystery

On August 13, 1780, the American Sloop Saratoga put to sea, the first ship named after the stunning American victory that helped to change the tide of the war. The ship was 68 feet long at the keel and 25 feet wide. She was rated at 150 tons. She carried 18 guns, 16 nine pounders…
