*** Welcome to piglix ***

Montgomery Schuyler

Montgomery Schuyler
Born (1843-08-19)August 19, 1843
Ithaca, NY
Died July 16, 1914(1914-07-16) (aged 70)
New Rochelle, NY
Alma mater Hobart College
Occupation Writer and critic
Employer The New York Times, Harper's Weekly, The Sun
Spouse(s) Katherine Beekman Livingston
Children Montgomery Schuyler, Jr.
Robert Livingston Schuyler
Parent(s) Rev. Anthony Schuyler
Eleanor Johnson

Montgomery Schuyler, AIA, (August 19, 1843, Ithaca, NY – July 16, 1914, New Rochelle, NY) was a highly influential critic, journalist and editorial writer in New York City who wrote about and influenced art, literature, music and architecture during the city's "Gilded Age." He was active as a journalist for over forty years but is principally noted as a highly influential architecture critic, and advocate of modern designs and defender of the skyscraper.

Schuyler was born in Ithaca, New York, the son of Eleanor Johnson and the Rev. Anthony Schuyler, one time rector of the Protestant Episcopal Church Grace Church, which is now known as the Church of the Epiphany. The Schuylers were one of the oldest families in New York, descendants of Philip Pieterse Schuyler, who settled in Beverwyck (now Albany, New York) in 1650.

Schuyler entered Hobart College in 1858 but failed to graduate. He became a member of the Sigma Phi Society.

He married Katherine Beekman Livingston in 1876. Their families were previously connected as Schuyler's great x7 aunt had married Katherine's ancestor, Robert Livingston, first Lord of the manor of Livingston (also ancestor of both Presidents Bush and Eleanor Roosevelt) in Albany in 1679.

Schuyler arrived in New York in 1865, at the end of the American Civil War, and worked as an editorial writer on The World, leaving to join the editorial staff of the New York Times in 1883. He was an editorial writer for the New York Times for twenty-four years. In addition, "he was managing editor of Harper's Weekly from 1885–1887, and was connected with the publishing department of Harper & Bros. from 1887 to 1894, serving both in an editorial capacity and as a writer. In the last few years Mr. Schuyler had been a contributor to The Sun, and also wrote for many magazines and periodicals, particularly on the subject of architecture, in which he specialized. The modern skyscraper had a staunch advocate in Mr. Schuyler, who believed that it was a legitimate architectural expression of our times."


...
Wikipedia

...