Arthur Scott Burden (August 11, 1879 – June 15, 1921)[1] was an American banker, equestrian, and member of the young set of New York society during the Gilded Age.
Early life
Burden was born on August 11, 1879, in Troy, New York. He was the youngest of four sons born to James Abercrombie Burden Sr. (1833–1906) and Mary Margaret Proudfit (née Irvin) Burden (1837–1920). His siblings included James A. Burden Jr., who married Florence Adele Sloane (daughter of Emily Thorn Vanderbilt); Richard Irvin Burden; and William Proudfit Burden, who married Natica Belmont (daughter of Oliver Belmont).
Following his graduation from Harvard, Burden was connected with the Iron Works which his father and grandfather had been president of.[1] He later purchased a seat on the New York Stock Exchange and became a banker, working until his fall from during a hunting trip in England and then from a horse while playing polo at his estate in Jericho on Long Island, in 1913.[1]
Society life
Along with his wife Cynthia, brother William, sister-in-law Natica, and close friends Reginald Vanderbilt and Alfred Vanderbilt, he was part of a notable group of the younger set in society, both in New York City and Newport, Rhode Island.[1] His wife and sister-in-law were very close friends and "were girls of exceptional charm and vivacity and few rivals for popularity at the dances and other entertainments of those days."[1]
Eileen Burden (1910–1970),[10] who married investment banker Walter Maynard (1906–1971), a son of Walter E. Maynard, in 1932.[11] They later divorced and in 1963,[12] she married Thomas Robins (1897–1977).[13] Robins was the son of Thomas Robins, inventor of the conveyor belt.[14]
In late 1913, Burden fell twice from his horse and sustained injuries that caused him to be placed under constant care. As a result, in May 1921, his brother James filed a petition while his sister-in-law, Cynthia Roche's, was away in London, requesting that he be declared incompetent.[15] Later that month, a sheriff's jury found Burden to be "incompetent to care for his person and property."[16] Arthur, however, died shortly thereafter, at a branch of the New York Hospital in White Plains, New York, from pneumonia on June 15, 1921.[1] He left his entire estate to his widow.[17] Coincidentally, ten years later in 1931, his brother James was also injured in a fall,[18] and died the following year of an embolism as a consequence of the fall.[2]
A year after his death, his widow Cynthia was remarried to Guy Fairfax Cary Sr. and became the mother of two more children, Guy Fairfax Cary II and Cynthia Cary, who married Charles Bingham Penrose Van Pelt,[19] and later, the newspaper publisher Edwin Fairman Russell. Russell was previously married to Lady Sarah Consuelo Spencer-Churchill, daughter of John Spencer-Churchill, 10th Duke of Marlborough.[20]
^ ab"James A. Burden Dead In Syosset". The New York Times. June 2, 1932. Retrieved 2015-08-04. President of Iron Company Bearing the Family Name Victim of Embolism. Sequel To An Accident. Prominent In New York Society Prince of Wales Entertained at Woodside, His Estate
^Thayer, William Roscoe; Castle, William Richards; Howe, Mark Antony De Wolfe; Pier, Arthur Stanwood; Voto, Bernard Augustine De; Morrison, Theodore (1922). The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association. p. 149. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
^Kipen, David (1995-04-03). "Oliver Platt: from second banana to pick of the bunch". L.A. Life. Los Angeles Daily News. p. L1.
Spinzia, Raymond E. and Judith A. Long Island's Prominent North Shore Families: Their Estates and Their Country Homes. vol I. College Station, Texas, VirtualBookworm, 2006.