George Washington Schuyler (February 2, 1810 – February 1, 1888) was an American businessman, author, politician, and member of the prominent Schuyler family.[1]
Early life
George Washington Schuyler was born on February 2, 1810, in Stillwater, New York, the son of Annatje (née Fort) Schuyler (1770–1851) and John Harmanus Schuyler (1763–1846), the private secretary of John Barker Church. His siblings included Henry Ten Broeck Schuyler, Phillip Church Schuyler, Catherine Angelica Schuyler (wife of Nicholas Bleecker), and Rebecca Sarah Margaret Schuyler.[2]
His paternal grandparents were Harmanus Schuyler (a son of Nicholas Schuyler and Elsie (née Wendell) Schuyler) and Christina Ten Broeck (a daughter of Samuel Ten Broeck and Maria (née Van Rensselaer) Ten Broeck).[2]
His family moved to Ithaca, New York in 1811. There, he worked on the family farm and attended the public schools. At age sixteen, he began to work at a drugstore and learned this trade. In 1834, he enrolled at New York University and graduated in 1837.
Career
After graduating from college, Schuyler returned to Ithaca and opened his own drugstore.
After serving in the Assembly, he was appointed by Governor Samuel J. Tilden as auditor of the Canal Department,[5] a position he held for nearly five years.[4][6]
Schuyler served as a trustee of Cornell University from its foundation, and treasurer from 1868 to 1874.[7] In 1885, he published Colonial New York: Philip Schuyler and His Family (Charles Scribner's Sons; 2 volumes), a valuable resource of Dutch origins, history, and genealogy in the Albany region.[8][9]
Personal life
Schuyler was married to Matilda Scribner (1809–1898), the daughter of Uriah Rogers Scribner and Martha Scribner. Matilda was a half-sister to Charles Scribner (1821–1871), the founder of Charles Scribner's Sons. Together, they were the parents of:
Walter S. Schuyler (1850–1932), who married Mary Miller Gardiner, later Elizabeth Stanton. Career Army officer who retired as a brigadier general in 1913.
Kate Bleecker Schuyler (1853–1859), who died young.
Schuyler died in Ithaca on February 1, 1888. After his death, his widow married Isaac Remsen Lane (d. 1910).[12][13]
^Birnie, Upton Jr. (October 1956). "Obituary, Walter S. Grant". Assembly. West Point, NY: Association of Graduates, United States Military Academy. p. 63 – via West Point Digital Library.