Thomas Newbold was an American lawyer, politician, and society leader during the Gilded Age.
Early life
Newbold was born on May 19, 1849. He was the son of Thomas Haines Newbold and Mary Elizabeth Newbold. Among his siblings was Catherine Augusta Newbold, Frederick Rhinelander Newbold, and Edith Newbold. His paternal grandparents were Philadelphia born Thomas Newbold and Catherine Newbold, who died in Paris, France in 1835. His maternal grandparents were Frederick William Rhinelander and Mary Lucretia Ann Rhinelander. His uncle was Frederic W. Rhinelander, president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and his maternal aunt was Lucretia Stevens Rhinelander, the mother ofFrederic Rhinelander Jones and Edith Newbold Jones, his first cousin who was a novelist and designer better known as Edith Wharton.
In 1892, Newbold and his wife Sarah were included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred", purported to be an index of New York's best families, published in The New York Times. Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom. Newbold was a member of the Knickerbocker Club, the Metropolitan Club, the Racquet and Tennis Club and the Church. In 1885, the Newbolds acquired property in Hyde Park, New York, known as Bellefield, adjacent to James Roosevelt's Springwood. In 1912, the Newbolds hired Beatrix Farrand to design a walled residential garden at Bellefield. It is one of the earliest extant examples of Farrand's residential designs, and is one of the only known pairings of works by Farrand and the architects McKim, Mead & White, who remodeled the Newbolds' eighteenth-century house from 1909 to 1911 in the Colonial Revival style.
Personal life
On June 2, 1880, Newbold was married to Sarah Lawrence Coolidge, a direct descendant of Thomas Jefferson. She was the daughter of T. Jefferson Coolidge, a Boston Brahmin businessman who served as the U.S. Minister to France under President Harrison, and Mehitable Sullivan "Hetty" Coolidge. Together, they were the parents of:
Mary Edith Newbold, who married William Gerald Dare Morgan, a descendant of the Livingston and Hoyt families, in 1916. Gerald, as he was known, was the brother of Geraldine Morgan Thompson.
Thomas Jefferson Newbold, who married Katherine Hubbard in 1914.
In 1916, he hired McKim, Mead & White to build a new residence for his family at 15 East 79th Street. The architects tore down two identical brownstones and built an Italian Renaissance style palazzo with an arched double-door entrance. Newbold's wife died at their New York home on December 29, 1922. He died on November 11, 1929 in New York City. He was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. After his death, his estate was divided equally among his three children with his eldest daughter Mary inheriting their New York City residence and Bellefield in Hyde Park.