A letter from Adelaide to her nephew, Schuyler Hamilton Jr. |
This research
was made possible by a new collection of Hamilton papers Schuyler Mansion
acquired from the Norwalk Historical Society.
In January of 1899,
Adelaide and Alice Hamilton’s names were all over the news. On January 17th,
1899, the New York Times published an article titled “Miss Hamilton is
Insane: Wealthy Granddaughter of Alexander Hamilton Pronounced So by Jury.” The
article followed a court case brought against Alice by her older sister,
Adelaide, in which she sought to have her younger sister institutionalized. From
these facts alone, it’s easy to assume there was no love between them and that
Adelaide sought to institutionalize Alice out of desire for her sister’s money
or out of malice, but when their entire lives are taken in account, a much more
complex story emerges.
Adelaide (1830-1915) and
Alice Hamilton (1838-1905) were two of twelve children born to Maria Eliza van
den Heuvel (1795-1873) and John Church Hamilton (1792-1882), who was Elizabeth
Schuyler (1757-1854) and Alexander Hamilton’s (1755-1804) son. They grew up in
an incredibly wealthy household in New York City, with both of their parents
coming from well-off and societally important families. They lived at 17 West
20th Street in Manhattan, where Adelaide stayed until her death.
While not much
information exists about the girls’ childhoods, one letter offers a small
window into their world. In a letter from their mother to Adelaide written in
January of 1851, when Adelaide was twenty and Alice was twelve, their mother
filled Adelaide in on her travels in Baltimore and Washington D.C., and sent
suggestions and wishes to her other children still at home with Adelaide. She told
Adelaide to give Alice her “best love” and hoped she would go to the opera.
In the crosswritten section, Adelaide sends their nephew Alice's best wishes. |
From these letters, it’s
clear the Hamilton children were expected to partake in high society and went
through the usual traditions, such as making their formal entrance into the
social scene and attending operas and plays.
Adelaide and Alice, as
well as one of their other sisters, Charlotte (1819-1896), remained unmarried
and
lived in their family home together through adulthood. While Charlotte
predeceased them both, later letters from Adelaide to her nephew, Schuyler
Hamilton Jr. (1853-1907), reveal she often summered at Newport, Rhode Island,
which was a common stomping ground for the wealthy members of New York society.
Adelaide and Alice spent the summer of 1897 in Newport. One letter to her nephew
dated June 17th of that year mentioned the house they were staying
in, and on September 11, 1897, Adelaide wrote that “Aunt Alice is well and would
beg to be remembered if she knew I was writing.”
Adelaide describing the rooms she and Alice share at their summer home in Newport.
Sadly, within less than a
year, everything changed for Alice and Adelaide. The New York Times
article on Alice stated that she had been suffering from depression and
delusions since at least April of 1898, when she was committed to Pleasantville
Sanitorium. Adelaide brought the court case against Alice in 1899, seemingly to
keep her there.
Adelaide, as well as
medical experts, testified that Alice believed her relatives and herself to be
dead, that she experienced religious delusions, and suffered from
“melancholia.” She was found insane and had to stay at Pleasantville Sanitorium.
The New York Times noted that Alice had a large estate—over $200,000 in
property and a personal income of about $6,000 per year—but it did not mention
what happened to her assets.
Alice was hospitalized at
the “MacDonald House” in Mount Pleasant in Westchester County, New York, right
outside of New York City. The doctor who ran the private hospital was Dr. Carl
MacDonald, who lived there with his wife and daughter. In 1900, there was a
staff of seventeen people, including eight nurses. That year, at the time the
census was taken, there were seven patients, including Alice, at the hospital.
Nothing is really known about the hospital or the doctor who ran it, but the
small number of patients suggests it was for wealthy families, and its location
in Westchester County was secluded from New York City in the relative
countryside. Alice lived there until her death in 1905.
Adelaide died in 1915, at
her family home, with multiple servants living at the estate with her. She was
the last of her sisters to die.
As publicized as this
story was within their lifetimes, the personal details—such as the true
thoughts and emotions behind it—remain a mystery. As we have this new
collection in our possession, there’s always a chance we’ll find something in
it or in a new collection yet to come that sheds more light on their lives.
Until then, this is the story of Adelaide and Alice as the records have told
it.
Quite informative Jessie, thank you for your work putting this together.
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