Nicholas William Stuyvesant


Nicholas William Stuyvesant was a New York landowner and merchant who was a great-great-grandson of Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch Director-General of New Amsterdam.

Early life

Stuyvesant was born in New York City in 1769 and named after his uncle, Nicholas William Stuyvesant. He was the eldest son of Petrus "Peter" Stuyvesant and Margaret Stuyvesant. His siblings included Judith Stuyvesant, who married Benjamin Winthrop ; Cornelia Stuyvesant, who married Speaker of the New York State Assembly Dirck Ten Broeck, and Elizabeth Stuyvesant, who married Adjutant General of New York Nicholas Fish, and Peter Gerard Stuyvesant.
Nicholas was descended from many of New York's most prominent families and characters. Through his father, he was the 2x great-grandson of Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch Director-General of New Netherland. His paternal grandparents were Peter Gerard Stuyvesant and Judith Stuyvesant of the Bayard family. Through his mother Margaret, he was descended from the Livingston and Beekman families, as she was the daughter of [Gilbert Livingston family|Livingston (1690–1746)|Gilbert Livingston] and Cornelia Livingston, granddaughter of Robert Livingston the Elder, the first Lord of Livingston Manor, and great-granddaughter of Wilhelmus Beekman. His maternal aunt, Joanna Livingston, was married to Pierre Van Cortlandt, the first Lieutenant Governor of the New York.

Career

He was educated in Scotland, inherited his uncle's "the Bowery House". In 1795, he built a Federal-style house that today is the oldest house in Greenwich Village at 44 Stuyvesant Street.

Personal life

On January 31, 1795, Stuyvesant was married to Catherine Livingston Reade, a daughter of John Reade and Catherine Reade. Her grandfather was Loyalist merchant Robert Gilbert Livingston and her sister, Helen Sarah Reade, married James Hooker. Together, they were the parents of nine children, six sons and three daughters, including:
Stuyvesant died in the Stuyvesant family mansion on March 11, 1833.

Descendants

Through his daughter Catherine, he was a grandfather of Nicholas William Stuyvesant Catlin, who worked in marine insurance for fifty years and "was well known as a scholarly man of wide reading and many acquirements, but save an occasional appearance at the many clubs and societies with which he was connected, he lived in retirement, satisfied with the companions of his leisure—his books."
Through his daughter Helen, he was a grandfather of Henry Dudley, "a gentleman of wealth and leisure, who employed the opportunities thus given him for doing good in charitable work with an unstinted hand." He married Anna Mott Fellows.