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  1. Explore genealogy for Winthrop Aldrich born 1885 Rhode Island, United States died 1974 including ancestors + children + more in the free family tree community. login Winthrop Williams Aldrich (1885 - 1974)

  2. 6. Nov. 2018 · When William Backhouse Astor Sr. died, he left Rokeby to Maddie, who had wed John Winthrop Chanler, a New York State congressman and sachem of Tammany Hall. They had ten surviving children, born between 1862 and 1874, who inherited the property as tenants in common in 1875, following the premature death of their mother, who had caught a chill when returning from her grandfather’s funeral ...

  3. When Winthrop Williams Aldrich Sr. was born on 2 November 1885, in Providence, Providence, Rhode Island, United States, his father, Sen. Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich Sr, was 44 and his mother, Abby Pearce Truman Chapman, was 40.

  4. Winthrop Aldrich, 1953–57 Andrew Boxer When Winthrop W. Aldrich arrived at London Airport on 10 February 1953, one bystander quipped: ‘He looks like a British ambassador arriving in the United States.’1 This was an astute observation – Eisenhower could hardly have chosen a more Anglophile figure. For Aldrich, aged 68 when he took

  5. Abby was born in Providence, Rhode Island to Senator Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich and Abigail Pearce Truman Chapman, a distant descendant of the fourth signer of the Mayflower Compact. She was a sister of Congressman Richard Steere Aldrich and banker/financier Winthrop Williams Aldrich. Her early education came at the hands of Quaker governesses. In 1891, she enrolled at the Miss Abbott's School ...

  6. Added: Aug 1, 2002. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 6653100. Source citation. Philanthropist. She was the daughter of Senator Nelson W. Aldrich. Married to John D. Rockefeller, Jr., she was the mother of Abby, John D. III, Nelson, Laurance, Winthrop, and David Rockefeller. She encouraged the establishment of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City ...

  7. Winthrop Aldrich, 1953–57 Andrew Boxer When Winthrop W. Aldrich arrived at London Airport on 10 February 1953, one bystander quipped: ‘He looks like a British ambassador arriving in the United States.’1 This was an astute observation – Eisenhower could hardly have chosen a more Anglophile figure. For Aldrich, aged 68 when he took