Elisha Dyer III (October 23, 1862 – June 2, 1917) was an American socialite prominent in Newport and New York society during the Gilded Age.
Early life
Dyer was born on October 23, 1862, in Providence, Rhode Island. His parents were of Rhode Island GovernorElisha Dyer Jr. (1839–1906) and Nancy Anthony (née Viall) Dyer (1843–1920),[1] who was the daughter of William Viall and Mary Brayton Anthony. Together, they were the parents of[2] his siblings included George Rathbone Dyer, who died young; another Brig. Gen.George Rathbone Dyer, who married Grace Gurnee Scott; and Hezekiah Anthony Dyer, who married Charlotte Osgood Tilden.[1]
Dyer was educated at private schools in Providence and graduated from Brown University in 1883. He later graduated from Columbia Law School in 1885, and was admitted to the bar in that year.[3] He worked as a broker with Ulman & Co.[4]
Society life
In 1892, Dyer and his wife were included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred", purported to be an index of New York's best families, published in The New York Times.[5] Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom.[6] Dyer, a renowned dancer and cotillion leader, was known as "one of the most popular men in the Newport Summer colony" and was an undisputed leader of society.[4] Dyer was known to have introduced Harry Lehr, McAllister's successor, to the Newport colony.[4]
The Dyer's Newport home, known as Wayside, was located on Bellevue Avenue.[7]
Dyer was married to Sidney (née Turner) Swan (1857–1933),[8] the daughter of Sidney (née Patterson) Turner and William Fauntleroy Turner.[9] Sidney was also the grand-niece of Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte and a great-granddaughter of a Baltimore merchant William Patterson.[10] They did not have any children together, however, he was the stepfather of his wife's daughter from a previous marriage (to Donnell Swan), Laura Patterson Swan,[11] who married Andrew Robeson[12] in 1913.[7][13]
Upon his father's death in 1906, he and his siblings inherited $250 each with the remainder of the estate, valued at about $250,000, left to his mother.[14] His father left $5,000 to Miss Francis E. Kinnicutt, his private secretary.[14]
He died of pneumonia at his home in Newport on June 2, 1917.[4] He was interred in Swan Point Cemetery in Providence.[15] In November 1917, his widow sold their five-story residence at 37 West 56th Street in New York City.[16] After his widows death in 1933, the estate (valued in excess of $1,000,000) was left to Sidney's granddaughter, Lauretta Patterson Robeson.[17]