His mother was the granddaughter of Maturin Livingston (1769–1847) and Margaret Lewis (1780–1860). Margaret was the only child and sole heiress of Gov. Morgan Lewis (1754–1844), the governor of New York.[1]
Gerry was the owner of the Aknusti Estate in the Catskill Mountains of New York, adjoining his family's estate at Lake Delaware, New York. The Aknusti manor house was designed by architectural firm of Walker & Gillette with landscaping by the famed Olmsted Brothers firm.
Gerry served as a director of The Farmers Loan and Trust Company,[4] a predecessor firm of Citigroup and kept his office at 258 Broadway in Manhattan.[3]
Thoroughbred horse racing
He was a successful thoroughbred horse owner & breeder and a member of The Jockey Club. It has been published that he was the underbidder for Man o' War,[5] at the auction won by Samuel D. Riddle at the Saratoga yearling sale in 1918. He bred and raced Thoroughbred horses under the name Aknusti Stable. Some of his racing successes include:
Owner of "Cyclops" which won the Hartsdale Stakes in 1922 at the Empire City Race Track.[8] Also won The Emerald Purse the same day as owner of the horse "Bee's Wax". Both horses trained by George M. Odom.
His wife, Cornelia, owned "Young Peter" which won the prestigious Travers Stakes in 1947. The trainer was George M. Odom. The jockey was Tommy May.[11] Mrs. Gerry was ill and did not attend the race, but instead listened to the race on the radio from the Gerry family house at Aknusti.
Wife, Cornelia, also won the Oceanport Stakes as owner of "Master Ace" in 1954.[12]
Owner of "Emotion" which won the Eclipse Award for 3 Year Old Filly in 1922.[13]
He privately printed in 1931 at his own cost a detailed book on thoroughbred racehorses titled The Matriarchy of the American Turf for which he wrote the foreword. The book was authored by Marguerite F. Bayliss.
His daughter-in-law, Martha, was also involved in thoroughbred racing and was the owner of U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee, Forego. Martha Gerry was one of only five people ever named an Exemplar of Racing by the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame.[15]
In 1909, he founded the Lake Delaware Boys Camp, a summer camp for underprivileged boys outside of Delhi, NY,[26] that is still in operation today. Gerry died at his home in Delhi, New York, on October 31, 1957, hours after his brother Peter died.[2]
Descendants
Through his second son, Robert, he was the grandfather of Robert L. Gerry III (b. 1937), businessman and oil executive.[27]