George Washington Vanderbilt II

@Art Collector, Facts and Facts

George Washington Vanderbilt was an art collector primarily known for the lavish Biltmore Estate he built in North Carolina

Nov 14, 1862

AmericanMiscellaneousScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 14, 1862
  • Died on: March 6, 1914
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Art Collector, Miscellaneous
  • Spouses: Edith Vanderbilt
  • Siblings: Cornelius Vanderbilt II
  • Childrens: Cornelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt

George Washington Vanderbilt II born at

New Dorp

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Birth Place

George Washington Vanderbilt married Edith Stuyvesant Dresser in June 1898 at the American Cathedral in Paris, France. Their only child, a daughter named Cornelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt was born in 1900.

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Personal Life

He died at the relatively young age of 51 on March 6, 1914 following complications after an appendectomy in Washington, D.C.

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Personal Life

George Washington Vanderbilt was born on November 14, 1862, in New Dorp, Staten Island, New York, to the prominent businessman and philanthropist William Henry Vanderbilt and Maria Louisa Kissam. His father was also a well-known collector of paintings. George was the youngest of the couple’s eight children. Both his parents, especially his father, doted on him.

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Childhood & Early Life

He received his education from local private schools and at home by tutors. He was an intelligent child who displayed a thirst for knowledge. He loved reading and proved himself to be a good student.

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Childhood & Early Life

As a teenager, he became obsessed with books and evolved into a voracious reader. He even made a note of the books he had read in his notebook. He also diligently maintained a personal diary.

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Childhood & Early Life

His father owned elegant mansions in New York City and Newport and an 800-acre country estate on Long Island. One of the mansions at 640 Fifth Avenue, completed when George was a young man, was considered the largest and most splendid house in Manhattan. The house was equipped with the latest technological conveniences like refrigeration and telephones.

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Childhood & Early Life

Even though he developed an interest in his father’s art collections, he was never much interested in his family’s business affairs or financial matters. He did take an aesthetic interest in the family properties and oversaw the designs of his private quarters and personal library at their Manhattan mansion.

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Childhood & Early Life

His father William died in 1885. Upon his death, his large fortune of approximately $200 million was split between his sons, the bulk of which was split between his two older sons, Cornelius Vanderbilt II and William K. Vanderbilt.

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Later Years

George inherited $5 million upon his father’s death. He had already inherited $1 million a few years ago from his grandfather and had received a million dollars from his father on his 21st birthday.

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Later Years

Since he was not much interested in the family businesses, he gladly let his older brothers operate the Vanderbilt family business. He now ran the family farm at New Dorp and Woodland Beach.

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Later Years

Now that he had lots of wealth and leisure time on his hands, he started exploring the region around North Carolina as he had heard about the scenic beauty of the place. He found the place to be extremely beautiful. The climatic conditions in North Carolina were also pleasant, so he came up with the idea of building a vacation home there.

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Later Years

He soon started buying land in North Carolina, and hired Richard Morris Hunt as his building architect and Frederick Law Olmsted as his landscape architect. Both Hunt and Olmsted were well-known architects who had previously worked on some famous projects.

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Later Years

George Washington Vanderbilt is best remembered for building the largest private house in the United States—the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina. Spread over 178,926 square feet of floor space, the house was ranked eighth in America's Favorite Architecture by the American Institute of Architects. It is a major tourist attraction in Western North Carolina with almost 1 million visitors each year.

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Major Works