Rufus King Delafield was an American banker and manufacturer.
Early life
Delafield was born at his father's residence, 16 Wall Street in New York City, on November 18, 1802, and named after Rufus King, the first U.S. Senator from New York who was then serving as the U.S. Minister to the United Kingdom. His godfather was Alexander Hamilton. He was the youngest of nine sons and four daughters born to Anne Delafield and John Delafield, a merchant who emigrated to New York from England in 1788 and was a founder and director of the Mutual Insurance Company, becoming one of the wealthiest men in the country. His father's summer residence, built in 1791 on the East River opposite Blackwell's Island, was known as" Sunswick" and was one of the largest and best appointed private houses near New York. Among his siblings were older brothers John Delafield, Joseph Delafield, Henry Delafield, William Delafield, Maj. Gen. Richard Delafield, and Dr. Edward Delafield. His younger sister, Susan Maria Delafield, was married to Henry Parish. Rufus, his father, and his four brothers were painted by Morton H. Bly, which is today owned by the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. His maternal grandparents were Joseph Hallett and Elizabeth Hallett and his aunt, Mary Hallett, was the second wife of U.S. Representative Benjamin Tallmadge. His paternal grandparents were John Delafield and Martha Delafield, a daughter of John Dell of Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, England. His nephew, Dr. Francis Delafield, was married to Katherine Van Rensselaer, and was the father of Connecticut representative Edward Henry Delafield.
Career
After an education in New York, Delafield engaged in "mercantile business" and served as an officer of the Phenix Bank from 1823 to 1835, and actuary and secretary of the Farmers Loan and Trust Company from 1835 to 1852. He also served as a trustee of the State Agricultural College of New York. After his banking career, he was the founder and president of the Delafield & Baxter Hydraulic Cement Company, located at the High Falls at Rondout Creek, which was previously Ogden & Delafield. Delafield & Baxter, which was headquartered at 54 Pine Street, produced Rosendale cement and their mill was driven by water-power and consisted of "three crackers, and four run of four and half feet stone" and three quarries. His son Henry Parish Delafield was the secretary of the firm, and after his death, his eldest son Edward assumed the presidency of Delafield & Baxter.
Richard Delafield, who married widow Clara Carey, sister of Frederic de Peyster Foster and Giraud Foster, in 1879. After her death, he married Edith Pauline Fesser in 1913. He founded the firm of Delafield & Company, of New York, Chicago, and San Francisco.
Like his father and brothers, Delafield established a country seat for himself, Rufus' being in New Brighton, Staten Island, where he brought the residence "to the highest state of cultivation." Today, the former Delafield estate in the Livingston neighborhood, is home to the Staten Island Cricket Club. Delafield died on February 6, 1874 at 253 Park Avenue in New York City, the residence of his son-in-law, John T. Hall. After a funeral at Trinity Church, he was buried at the family mausoleum at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.
Descendants
Through his eldest son Edward, he was the grandfather of Rufus Delafield, who married Elizabeth Breeze Morse in 1886; and Massachusetts legislator Frederick Schuchardt Delafield, who married Anne Oakley Brooks in 1894. Through his daughter Catherine, he was the grandfather of Elsie Bard Hall, who did not marry; Suzette Tonnelé Hall, who married Bryce Metcalf in 1905; and Katharine Cruger Delafield Hall, who married W. S. Groesbeck Fowler in 1910.