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Henry Maunsell Schieffelin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Maunsell Schieffelin (New York City, August 7, 1808 – Alexandria, Egypt, July 27, 1890), was an American businessman, philanthropist and consul general in Liberia.[1][2] He was a founding member and President of the New York Colonization Society who financed a mission to explore the interior of Liberia.[3]

Biography

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House No. 665 of Mrs. H.M. Schieffelin. East Fifth Avenue in 1911 (photograph by Burton Welles).

Henry Maunsell Schieffelin was the first son of Henry Hamilton Schieffelin and Maria Theresa (nee Bradhurst) Schieffelin. He married Sarah Louisa Wagstaff in 1835; the couple had no children.[1] After his first wife’s death, Schieffelin married Sarah Minerva Kendall from Augusta, ME, in 1859.[1] The couple had two daughters: Frances (nicknamed Fanny), and Mary (nicknamed Minnie).[1] The family lived in a luxuriously furnished five-story house in Manhattan on 665 Fifth Avenue between East 52nd and East 53rd Street and kept a country home in Greek Revival style, called Ashton, in Yonkers, NY.[1]

Schieffelin was a partner in Schieffelin & Co, managed by his nephew William Henry Schieffelin (son of his brother Samuel Bradhurst Schieffelin).

Committee work

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Schieffelin donated to a school in Liberia that is still called Schieffelin School or Schieffelin Camp today.[1]

Death

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Schieffelin died in Alexandria, Egypt, while visiting his daughter Frances Kendall Schieffelin and his son-in-law Ernest Howard Crosby, who was appointed a Judge on the Mixed Tribunals in Alexandria by President Harrison.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Scheufele, Michael (2022). Jacob Scheuffelin, currently in Pennsylvania … Five Hundred Years of the Schieffelin Family. wbg Academic in Herder. pp. 122–125. ISBN 978-3534450060.
  2. ^ "Henry Maunsell Schieffelin and Family". emuseum.nyhistory.org. Retrieved 2023-07-29.
  3. ^ "Henry Maunsell Schieffelin (1808-1890)". HouseHistree.