Valentine Everit Macy (March 23, 1871 – March 21, 1930) was an American industrialist and philanthropist, involved in local government.[1] In the 1910s and 1920s, he served in Westchester County, New York, as commissioner of the Department of Charities and Corrections, the Commissioner of Public Welfare, and as Commissioner of Parks.
Biography
Early years and education
Macy was born in 1871 to Josiah Macy Jr. and Louisa Everett. His father was an officer in Standard Oil. He was named for his maternal grandfather, a Brooklyn leather merchant. His great-grandfather Josiah Macy had been a prominent shipping magnate on Nantucket. The Macy family had founded an oil company which built the State of New York's first oil refinery near Long Island City. Everit's father, Josiah Macy Jr., sold out to the Standard Oil trust and served on that company's board.[2] His mother, Caroline Macy, was a benefactor of Columbia University, donating the funds to build Macy Hall.[3] His sister was Kate Macy Ladd, a prominent philanthropist.
At the death of his father in 1876, the five-year-old V. Everit Macy inherited over $20 million (approximately $354,884,000 today). He was interested in design and architecture from an early age, and studied architecture at Columbia University, though he never practiced. He received his undergraduate degree from the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation with the class of 1893.[4]
Public service and philanthropy
Macy served as the commissioner of the Westchester County, New York, Department of Charities and Corrections from 1913–19, as Commissioner of Public Welfare in 1925, and as Commissioner of Parks from 1926-30. He also served as president of the National Civic Federation.[5]
In 1925, Macy gave land in memory of his wife for the construction of the Girl Scouts' Camp Edith Macy.
Personal life
Macy's wife, the former Edith Wiseman Carpenter, was a prominent member of the Girl Scout National Board of Directors and a founding member of New York's Cosmopolitan Club. Macy and his wife had two sons and a daughter, Josiah Noel Macy, Valentine E. Macy Jr., and Edytha Carpenter Macy.[7][8]
Macy died in a Phoenix, Arizona hotel on March 21, 1930, two days before his 59th birthday.[1]