Robert Guestier Goelet (guh-LET;[1] September 28, 1923 – October 9, 2019) was a prominent American philanthropist and former executive at Chemical Bank, founded by the Goelet family in 1824.[2]
Early life
Goelet was born on September 28, 1923, at a chateau in Amblainville, France. He was a son of Anne Marie (née Guestier) Goelet, whose family were wine merchants (Barton & Guestier) and owned the 10,000 acre chateau, and Robert Walton Goelet.[3] His mother was French and his father was American. His father, who owned the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in New York, donated the hotel to Harvard University after his death in 1941.[4]
After the death of his wife's uncle, Robert David Lion Gardiner, in 2004, the Goelets took possession of the 3,300 acre Gardiner's Island, which has 27 miles of coastline, several colonial buildings, a 200-year-old windmill, and a family cemetery.[14]
Goelet was a member of the French Jockey Club. He died at his home in Manhattan on October 9, 2019.[1]
^ abc"Notes on people: Alexandra Creel married Goelet Museum President". The New York Times. 1976-09-11. p. 12. Retrieved 2019-10-12. Independently wealthy, Mr. Goelet devoted much of his time to civic causes. By late 1975, when he was named president of the American Museum of Natural History, he had served in the same role at the New-York Historical Society and the New York Zoological Society (now the Wildlife Conservation Society). He was later the museum's chairman, until 1989, when he retired from the post.
^ abMatiland, Leslie (1 December 1975). "American Museum's New President Is a Man 'Nuts for Fossils'"(PDF). The New York Times. p. 15. Retrieved 14 October 2019. Mr. Goelet resigned his post as president of the New York Zoological Society upon his election to the presidency of the museum, and his term of office as a director of the National Audubon Society ended recently, after 18 years.