George Merritt (August 14, 1807 – October 5, 1873) was a businessman from New York. He owned the mansionLyndhurst on the Hudson River, which was sold to financier Jay Gould by Merritt's widow, Julia Merritt, after Merritt's death in 1873.
Merritt moved to New York City in 1822 and was a dry goods merchant until 1853, residing six years in Georgia. He was Owner and President of the New England Car Spring Co. from 1853 to 1868.[2]
George William Merritt (1856–1907), who was married three times,[b] and was separated from his third wife, Alma Desajo, when he took his own life at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City.[11]
In 1864 Merritt bought Knoll, the former country estate of William S. Paulding, Jr. and hired architect Alexander Jackson Davis to expand the estate, doubling the house's size in the gothic revival style between 1864 and 1865, renaming it "Lyndenhurst" for the estate's linden trees.[13] His new north wing added an imposing four-story tower, new porte-cochere (the old one was reworked as a glass walled vestibule) and a new dining room, two bedrooms, and servants quarters. After his death, his widow, Julia sold the Irvington house to financier Jay Gould.[14]
^One of George William Merritt's marriages was in 1881 to Augusta Temple Schack (1853–1920),[8] the youngest daughter of Danish broker Otto Wilhelm Christian Schack.[9][10]