William Douglas Sloane


William Douglas Sloane was an American businessman, sportsman, philanthropist, and member of New York society during the Gilded Age.

Early life

Sloane was born in New York City on February 29, 1844. He was the third son of William Sloane and Euphemia Sloane. Among his siblings was John Sloane, who married Adela Berry; Douglas Sloane; Mary Elizabeth Sloane; Henry Thompson Sloane, who married Jessie Ann Robbins ; and Euphemia Coffin, who married Edmund Coffin and was the mother of Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin and William Sloane Coffin Sr.
His parents were emigrants from Kilmarnock, Scotland. His paternal grandparents were John Sloane and Jane Mary Sloane, and his maternal grandparents were David and Margaret Douglas.

Career

Beginning at the age of fifteen, Sloane started working for the family carpet and furniture firm which was started by his father in 1843. In 1852, his uncle John W. Sloane joined the firm and it was renamed W. & J. Sloane.
In 1866, he became a member of the firm, and when the company was incorporated in 1891, Sloane became a director and remained on the board until his death. He served as treasurer of the company.
During the U.S. Civil War, Sloane enlisted as a private in Company H of the Seventh Regiment on October 31, 1862. The Regiment was ordered to Washington in 1863. He was made corporal in 1866, sergeant in 1868 and was honorably discharged on May 19, 1871.

Philanthropy

In 1888, Sloane and his wife financed the creation of New York's Sloane Hospital for Women in 1888 with an endowment of more than $1,000,000. The Sloane Hospital is currently an obstetrics and gynecology service within New York-Presbyterian Hospital and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. He also donated heavily to the Children's Aid Society.
In 1889, Yale honored Sloane with the honorary degree of M.A. In 1912, Sloane and his brother Henry jointly donated in excess of $500,000 to create the Yale Physics Laboratory at Yale University, as a memorial to their father.
Sloane was a member of the board of trustees of Columbia University, a fellow of the New-York Historical Society, and a director of almost twelve companies, including the Suburban Homes Company, the United States Trust Company, the Central and South American Telegraph Company, the Eastern Steel Company, the Guaranty Safe Deposit Company, the Guaranty Trust Company, the Mahoning Railroad Company, and the National City Bank of New York.

Society life

In 1892, Sloane along with his wife and several members of their extended families, 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.
He was a member of the Union Club of the City of New York, the Metropolitan Club, the Ardsley Club, the Union League Club, the Racquet and Tennis Club, the Automobile of America Club, the Riding Club, the New York Yacht Club, the Sleepy Hollow Club, the Country Club and the Aero Club.

Personal life

In 1872, Sloane was married to Emily Thorn Vanderbilt, the fifth child, and second daughter, of William Henry Vanderbilt. Her siblings included William, Cornelius, Margaret, Florence, Frederick, Eliza, and George Washington Vanderbilt II, all grandchildren of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt. Together, they were the parents of three daughters and two sons: He also had a country estate in Mount Kisco, New York which is now called Merestead Park.
In New York, the Sloane's lived at 2 West 52nd Street in Manhattan. In 1885, William and Emily commissioned Peabody and Stearns to build Elm Court, the enormous shingle-style "cottage" in Lenox, Massachusetts.
Sloane died of a kidney ailment on March 19, 1915 in Aiken, South Carolina, of which he had been suffering from for a while. Following a funeral at St. Bartholomew's Church, he was buried in the Sloane Mausoleum in Moravian Cemetery at New Dorp, Staten Island. After his death, his widow remarried in 1920 to Henry White, the former U.S. Ambassador to France and Italy, and a signatory of the Treaty of Versailles. Emily died, aged 94, in Lenox, Massachusetts on July 29, 1946.

Descendants

His grandchildren include Adele Hammond, paternal grandmother of actor Timothy Olyphant; Alice Frances Hammond, wife of jazz musician Benny Goodman; Rachel Hammond, cattle breeder and wife of Manley D. Breck; and John Henry Hammond, talent scout.