Robert Livingston (1708-1790)

3rd & last Lord of Livingston Manor, New York

He owned what was referred to as the "Upper Manor" (Clermont, built by his first cousin Judge Robert Livingston was referred to as the "Lower Manor") which ran from the Hudson River east to the Massachusetts Line. After his death this was divided up between his children into several "Great Lots". The "Upper Manor Livingstons" were described as "Opportunists in Politics" and were distrusted by Governor Clinton during the Revolution but later entered into an alliance with Clinton's Republicans from 1792 to 1798, becoming staunch Federalists. He and his wife were the parents of thirteen children, eight of whom (listed above) lived to adulthood. He curtailed the inheritance of his eldest son, Peter, and gave him The Hermitage. Other houses built by his sons on the former Manor of Livingston included Teviotdale and Oak Hill.

Parents (2)

Col. Philip Livingston

2nd Lord of Livingston Manor, New York

1686-1749

Catherine (Van Brugh) Livingston

Mrs Catherina (Van Brugh) Livingston

1689-1756

Spouses (2)

Maria (Thong) Livingston

Mrs Maria (Thong) Livingston

1711-1765

Gertrude (Van Rensselaer) Livingston

Mrs Gertrude (Van Rensselaer) Schuyler, Livingston

1714-1790

Children (8)

Peter Robert Livingston

Colonel Peter R. Livingston, of "The Hermitage" Linlithgo, New York

1737-1794

Maria (Livingston) Duane

Mrs "Mary" (Livingston) Duane

1738-1821

Walter Livingston

of Broadway, N.Y.C. & "Teviotdale"; 1st Speaker of the New York State Assembly

1740-1797

Robert Cambridge Livingston

Robert "Cambridge" Livingston, of Hudson, Columbia County, New York

1742-1790

Catherine (Livingston) Patterson

Mrs Catherine (Livingston) Patterson

1744-1832

Alida (Livingston) Gardner

Mrs Alida (Livingston) Gardner

1747-1791

John Livingston

of "Oak Hill" Linlithgo, Columbia County, New York

1750-1822

Hendrick Livingston

Lt.-Colonel "Henry" Livingston, of the 10th Regiment; died unmarried

1752-1823

Categories

Columbia Rising: Civil Life on the Upper Hudson from the Revolution to the Age of Jackson (2013) by John L. Brooke