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Clermont State Historic Site

The Strange Case of Trevor McVitty

Alright true crime fans, deep from the annals of the extended Livingston family, we have one for you to puzzle over.             Reginald (Rex) Leopold Moore McVitty, born in August of 1899 in Bantry, married Honoria Livingston of Clermont. His parent were Rev. William Presley McVitty, a methodist minister who seems to have spent quite…

Forced To Serve

The system of slavery was so deeply ingrained in colonial American culture that when white officers joined the Continental Army they brought along a valet. This was a delicate way of saying that they were bringing an enslaved man to war, for no pay, to take care of them and sometimes even put them in…

Kilsby: An Enslaved Man Who Set Himself Free

We don’t know how many people the Livingstons enslaved at Clermont. We will probably never know. We have snapshots of certain times, wills, census records, doctors’ visits but these don’t tell us about the people who were here in between those times. People who were forced to be here in between the snapshots, so it…

The Hessian Patriot

On April 20, 1818, an old man stood outside City Hall in Hudson having just arrived from Germantown. He was 76 years old, and he was there to apply for a pension for his service to the United States during the Revolutionary War. Like thousands of other veterans around the country he was waiting for…

McVitty Takes His Irish Friend To See Historic Williamsburg

As site staff have been swamped with program work of late, we turn once again to our guest correspondent Rex McVitty to update our blog This article originally appeared in the Sarasota Journal on Thursday, August 22, 1963 Last week, we went traveling south again. This time we headed south to the Eastern Shore of…

Remembrances of a Founder: Robert R. Livingston in Popular Memory

If you haven’t been to Clermont yet this season you have missed out on our gallery exhibit “Remembrances of a Founder: Robert R. Livingston in Popular Memory.” This exhibit explores the way Livingston has been remembered in recent memory rather than how he lived.             The founding generation knew that they would be remembered for…

If Flora Doesn’t Get You, Fauna Probably Will

Thursday October 17, 1968 Rex McVitty Here at Sylvan Cottage by the Hudson River in New York, in the fall of the year my thought turn to self-protection. There are two enourmous black walnut trees, one on each side of the path from our porch to the drive and at this time of the year,…

FDR Raged Because McVitty Wasn’t Shot!

A guest post by Rex McVitty, Honoria Livingston’s husband and correspondent for the Sarasota Journal. June 21, 1963 FDR Raged Because McVitty Wasn’t Shot! I wrote in a previous article about seeing and talking with the Roosevelt boys at Hyde Park last Decoration Day and now I will tell you about an incident that happened…

The Roosevelts and The Livingstons: Centuries of Intertwining

The Livingston family and the Roosevelt family have been linked by business and marriage for centuries going back to the 1790’s when Chancellor Robert R. Livingston worked with Nicholas Roosevelt to invent a practical steamboat. The familial relationship to the Livingstons is even more fascinating though.             Elliott Roosevelt (1860-1894), President Theodore Roosevelt’s younger brother,…

Charles Goodwin Ridgely: Early American Naval Hero

On December 1, 1822, Charles Goodwin Ridgely married Cornelia Louisiana Livingston in Clermont. Cornelia was the daughter of Margaret Maria Livingston, Chancellor Robert R. Livingston’s granddaughter. This meant that she was one of the most sought-after women in the young country. Marrying into the Livingston family was akin to marrying royalty. So, who was this…

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