Robert Livingston (December 16, 1708 – November 27, 1790) was the third and final Lord of Livingston Manor and a member of the assembly for the manor from 1737 to 1790.
Livingston found himself embroiled in a border dispute with Massachusetts when some New Englanders began to settle on the eastern portion of the Manor. Some of the settlers were Livingston's own tenants, who tired of paying rent moved east and contended they were now in Massachusetts.[2] By 1767, Livingston Manor had about 285 tenant families, together leasing 30,000 from Robert, according to C.A. Kierner. Settlement was disbursed, with areas adjoining waterways, mills, and ironworks, the more densely populated.[6] The tenants paid their rent in wheat. In 1760 Livingston Manor produced 50,000 bushels; Robert had claim to one-tenth as income.[7]
During the Revolution, he made available to the New York Committee of Safety and the Continental Army, the iron mines and foundry on the Manor,[8] while his sons, Peter Robert, Walter, John and Henry, were actively involved on the American side.[9]
Personal life
On May 20, 1731, he married Maria Thong (1711–1765), granddaughter of Governor Rip Van Dam (1660–1749). Robert Livingston expected his sons to take their place as his business agents and had them educated accordingly. Together, they had thirteen children:[10]
Catherine Livingston (b. 1732), died in infancy.[2]
Philip Robert Livingston (1733–1756), died of kidney trouble.[2]
John Livingston (1749–1822), who married first Maria Ann Leroy (1759–1797),[12] daughter of Jacob Leroy and Cornelia Rutgers,[2] and second Catherine (Livingston) Ridley, his first cousin, the daughter of William Livingston and the widow of Matthew Ridley.
Hendrick "Henry" Livingston (1752–1823), who died unmarried.[2]
In 1764, a portrait of Livingston was painted by Thomas McIlworth (who also painted British officer John Bradstreet in 1764) at Livingston Manor.[1]
Livingston died on November 27, 1790, at the age of eighty-one. He broke the family tradition of leaving the estate to his eldest son and shared Livingston Manor among his five sons and his son-in-law James Duane.[13]