James Lent Barclay (October 5, 1848 – July 2, 1925) was an American member of New York society during the Gilded Age.[1]
Early life
Barclay was born on October 5, 1848, in Newtown on Long Island.[2] He was the third child and second son of four children born to Henry Barclay (1794–1863) and Sarah Ann Moore (1809–1873).[3] His siblings were Henry Anthony Barclay (1844–1905),[4] Fannie Barclay (1846–1922), and Sackett Moore Barclay (1850–1918).[3][5]
His maternal grandfather was Daniel Sackett Moore.[3] His paternal great oncle is Thomas Henry Barclay (1753–1830).
Career
Barclay attended Columbia University.[1] He is recorded as matriculating with the class of 1870, but it is unsure if he finished the degree.[6] He was president of the Barclay Realty Company which was located at 299 Broadway in Manhattan.[7] The company managed his family's extensive real estate holdings, generally located near Barclay Street, named for his ancestors.[1]
Society life
In 1892, both Barclay and his wife Olivia 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.[8] Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom.[9]
Barclay was married to Olivia Mott Bell (1855–1894).[10] She was the daughter of Isaac Bell and Adelaide (née Mott) Bell,[11] and the sister of Isaac Bell Jr. (1846–1889), the businessman and diplomat.[12] Before her death, they were the parents of one daughter:[2]
After the death of his first wife in 1894, he married Priscilla Palmer Dixon (1851–1924),[20] the widow of Thomas Chalmers Sloane (1847–1890) of the W. & J. Sloane Company, on April 16, 1896, at her home on West 51st Street in Manhattan.[2] She was the daughter of Courtlandt Palmer Dixon (1817–1883) and Hannah Elizabeth (née Williams) Dixon (1817–1888), a cousin of U.S. Representative and Senator Nathan F. Dixon III, a niece of Nathan F. Dixon II, and a granddaughter of U.S. Senator Nathan Fellows Dixon.[20]
Barclay died at his home, 15 West 48th Street in New York on July 2, 1925.[21] He was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.[1]
^"Form". Form: An Illustrated Weekly Pub. Every Sat. In the Interests of American Society at Home and Abroad. I (1): 13. October 25, 1913. Retrieved 27 October 2017.