His parents lived at 5 State Street, overlooking the Battery in Manhattan. His father was a prominent landlord in New York, as was his uncle, Peter Goelet, who was named after his great-grandfather, Peter Goelet. His grandfather was the merchant and landowner Peter P. Goelet.[2]
Career
He graduated from Columbia College in 1860[7] and was subsequently admitted to the bar. Goelet practiced law in the C.J & E. DeWitt (later DeWitt, Lockman and Kip) law firm that also counted his cousin George Goelet Kip and George Gosman DeWitt among its partners,[8] before retiring in 1879 to manage the real estate of his father and his unmarried uncle. After their deaths, he inherited half their fortune. He also served on the board of directors of the Union Trust Company, the New York Life Insurance and Trust Company, the Guaranty Trust Company, the Bank of New Amsterdam, the Chemical National Bank,[clarification needed] which his father and uncle were instrumental in founding.[1] In his obituary in The New York Times, he was described as:
"He was clear-headed and keen-witted, and his judgment in financial and real estate matters invariably commanded the respect of other business men. A loyal New Yorker, Robert Goelet took particular pride in promoting the growth and development of the city with which his family had long so long identified. He was a man of progressive ideas, and throughout his business career pursued a policy of improving his properties in a manner which would beautify the city."[1]
Beatrice Goelet (1885–1902), who died of pneumonia in 1902, aged 17.[10] As a child, she was painted by John Singer Sargent.[17]
He died of heart disease on April 27, 1899, in Naples, Italy.[1] After his body was brought from Italy by his yacht Nahma, his funeral was held at Trinity Church in Newport.[18] After the funeral, his body was again taken "by special train over the New Haven Road", and was buried in the Goelet Mausoleum, which had been completed only days before, at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.[18] His widow lived for another 13 years until her death in December 1912 at her home in Paris, 46 Avenue d'Iéna.[19] The statue Alma Mater at Columbia University was given in his memory.
^Yearbook. New York City: Association of the Bar of the City of New York. 1900. p. 112. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
^ ab"Robert W. Goelet Dies In Home At 61"(PDF). The New York Times. May 3, 1941. Retrieved 2010-07-26. Robert Walton Goelet of New York and Newport, R. I., a member of one of New York's oldest and wealthiest families, died of a heart attack yesterday at his ...
^Associated Press (May 3, 1941). "Death Claims Robert Goelet Financier, 61". The Hartford Courant. Archived from the original on December 3, 2012. Retrieved 2010-07-26. Robert Walton Goelet, 61, of New York and Newport, R. I., a financier and one of New York's largest property owners, died today in his old brownstone house at 48th Street and Fifth Avenue, one of the few remaining private residences on the...