
Philip Livingston
'Philip Livingston' (
January 15,
1716 –
June 12,
1778), was an
American merchant and statesman from
New York City. He was a delegate for
New York to the
Continental Congress from
1775 to
1778, and signed the
Declaration of Independence.
He was born in
Albany, New York into the prominent Livingston family. His grandfather, who had immigrated to New York and controlled the large grant called ''Livingston Manor'', was known as
Robert, 1st Lord of the Manor. His father, also named
Philip was the 2nd
Lord of the Manor. This Philip was, however, his fourth son, and thus could not inherit. The wife of the 2nd
Lord of the Manor was a daughter of
Albany, New York Mayor
Pieter Van Brugh.
Philip attended and graduated from
Yale College in
1737. He then settled in New York City and pursued a mercantile career. He became prominent as a merchant, and was elected Alderman in
1754. He was reelected to that office each year until
1763. Also in 1754, he went as a delegate to the
Albany Congress. There, he joined delegates from several other colonies to negotiate with Indians and discuss common plans for dealing with the
French and Indian War. They also developed a Plan of Union for the Colonies which was, however, rejected by
King George.
Livingston became an active promoter of efforts to raise and fund troops for the war, and in
1759 was elected to the colony's House of Representatives. He would hold that office until
1769, serving as Speaker in 1768. In October of
1765, he attended the
Stamp Act Congress, which produced the first formal protest to the crown as a prelude to the
American Revolution. Philip became strongly aligned with the radical block in that Congress. He joined New York's ''
Committee of Correspondence'' to continue communication with leaders in the other colonies.
When New York established a rebel government in
1775, he was the President of the Provincial Convention. They also selected him as one of their delegates to the
Continental Congress that year. In the Congress, he strongly supported separation from
Great Britain and in
1776 joined other delegates in the Declaration of Independence.
After the adoption of the new New York State Constitution, he was elected to the state Senate in
1777, while continuing in the national congress. He died suddenly while attending the sixth session of Congress in
York, Pennsylvania and is buried in the Prospect Hill Cemetery there. Livingston was a
Presbyterian, a
Mason, and an original promoter of King's College, which became
Columbia University.
His brother was New Jersey Governor
William Livingston.
His cousin was New York Congressman
Robert R. Livingston the Chancellor.
His wife was Christina Ten Broeck a great-granddaughter of
Albany, New York Mayor Dirck Wesselse Ten Broeck
[1] whose wife Margarita Cuyler was a niece of Maria Cuyler, the wife of
New York City Mayor
John Cruger. Mayor Cruger was father of
New York City Mayor
John Cruger Jr and grandfather of
Henry Cruger and MP and loyalist Colonel John Henry Cruger. Colonel Cruger was a brother in law of
Oliver De Lancey (the elder). De Lancy was a grandson of
New York Mayor Stephanus Van Cortlandt and an uncle of wife of South Carolina Congressman
Ralph Izard. Oliver's elder brother was
New York Governor James DeLancey. A brother of Christina was
Abraham Ten Broeck[2] - a Milita Brigadier General of Milita and a
Albany, New York Mayor. Abraham Ten Broeck's wife was Elizabeth
Van Rensselaer a sister of Stephen Van Renselaer II
[3]. A cousin of Abraham Ten Broeck was Maria Ten Broeck who was the wife of Continental Army General Goose Van Schaick
[4]-who was a son of
Albany, New York Mayor Sybrant Van Schaick. Goose Van Schaick's sister was married to Continental Army General
Peter Gansevoort-a great-grandnephew of
Albany, New York Mayor Pieter Van Burgh.
A daughter, Catherina, married Stephen Van Rennsselaer II; their son,
Stephen Van Rensselaer III, married Margarita Schuyler-daughter of General
Philip Schuyler-a great nephew of
Albany, New York Mayor
Pieter Schuyler.
A great-grandson Edward Livingston married Sarah R. Lansing-a daughter of Albany Mayor and
Congressman John Lansing.
Among his descendants were
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, actress
Jane Wyatt, writer
Harry Crosby, and cinematographer
Floyd Crosby and his son
David Crosby.
References
1. Biography of Dirck Wesselse Ten Broeck
2. Biography of Abraham Ten Broeck
3. Biography of Stephen Van Renselaer II
4. Biography of Goose Van Schaick
External links
★
biographic sketch at U.S. Congress website
★
Biography by Rev. Charles A. Goodrich, 1856
★
Appleton's Biography edited by Stanley L. Klos
★
Philip Livingston Find A Grave