Charles McEvers (1764-1841)

Charles McEvers Jr., President of the New York Insurance Company

He was a shipping merchant from 1804 to "long after 1815" with the famous firm of LeRoy, Bayard & McEvers. He was one of the 24 brokers who signed the Buttonwood Agreement (1792) which allowed for the creation of the New York Stock Exchange and is one of the most important financial documents in U.S. history. He succeeded Archibald Gracie as President of the New York Insurance Company in 1799. He was a director of the Bank of New York from 1816 to 1840. By 1830, his "hair was as white as snow". In 1787, he married Mary Bache, daughter of Theophylact Bache, President of the New York Chamber of Commerce, and they had two sons and a daughter. In 1806, he married his second wife, Margaret, daughter of Dr Ananias Cooper, of Rhinebeck, and had three further daughters. He inherited the McEvers Mansion at 34 Wall Street but later gave this to his son, Bache, and moved to 483 Broadway where he died.

Parents

Charles McEvers

Charles McEvers Sr., Merchant, of 34 Wall Street, New York City

1739-1808

Mary (Verplanck) McEvers

Mrs Mary (Verplanck) McEvers

1745-1778

Spouses

Mary (Bache) McEvers

Mrs Mary (Bache) McEvers

1766-1802

Margaret (Cooper) McEvers

Mrs Margaret (Cooper) McEvers

1775-1863

Children

Mary Bache McEvers

Mary Bache McEvers, died in childhood

1792-1806

Charles McEvers

Charles McEvers III, of New York, died unmarried

1794-1843

Bache McEvers

President of the New York Insurance Company

1798-1851

Mary (McEvers) Livingston

Mrs Mary (McEvers) Livingston

1806-1843