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Seward Cary

American polo player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seward Cary
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Seward Cary (March 1, 1862 – September 5, 1948) was an American polo player from New York State.

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Early life and education

Seward Cary was born on March 1, 1862, in Buffalo, New York. He was one of seven children born to prominent Buffalo resident, Dr. Walter Cary and Julia (née Love) Cary.[1][2] His siblings included: Trumbull Cary; Thomas Cary; Charles Cary (who married Evelyn Rumsey); Jennie Cary (who married Laurence D. Rumsey); Walter Cary Jr., and George Cary.[3][1]

Cary was the paternal grandson of Trumbull Cary, a New York State Senator and Assemblyman.[1] His maternal grand-uncle was Brig. General George Maltby Love.[4] His nephew through his sister Jennie, was Charles Cary Rumsey, who married Mary Harriman (daughter of millionaire railroad executive E. H. Harriman and Mary Williamson).[1]

Cary attended and graduated from Harvard University,[5] before attending the Buffalo Medical College in the Fall of 1886 where he belonged to the college society called the I.C.I.[6]

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Career

In February 1887, he went into the hardwood lumber business with Scatcherd & Son in Buffalo, "one of the largest hardwood lumber concerns in the country".[7] He became a member of the Buffalo Club, the Saturn Club, and the Genesee Valley Hunt Club.[6]

While at Harvard, Cary was credited with bringing polo during the 1880s.[1] He played polo for 58 consecutive seasons,[8] winning the W. H. Andrews Cup.[9][10][11]

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Personal life

Cary had an early relationship with Mabel Ganson (who later became a well-known patron of the arts) and her first marriage to Karl Evans was said to be inspired by his resemblance to Cary.[12] On July 13, 1887, he married Emily Lisle Scatcherd Cary (1862–1934), a daughter of James Newton Scatcherd and Anne (née Belton) Scatcherd.[13][7] Together they had a home in East Hempstead on Long Island and an apartment at 44 East 81st Street in Manhattan and were the parents of:[5]

After his wife's death, he moved to 277 Park Avenue, an apartment building designed by McKim, Mead, and White. Cary died while on vacation at Small Point, Maine, on September 5, 1948.[5] He was buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Buffalo.

References

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