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Remington family

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Article Genealogy
Parent: Ilion, New York Hop 4
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Remington family
NameRemington
RegionUnited States
OriginEngland
Founded17th century

Remington family The Remington family is an Anglo-American lineage known for industrial entrepreneurship, political engagement, artistic patronage, and transatlantic migration. Descendants and relations played roles in industrial centers such as New York City, Hartford, Connecticut, Ilion, New York, and London, and engaged with institutions like Columbia University, Yale University, Smithsonian Institution, and Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Origins and Early History

Early genealogical records trace Remington ancestors to East Anglia, Norfolk, and Suffolk in the 17th century, with later migration during the Great Migration (Puritan) to colonies including Massachusetts Bay Colony and Province of New York. Colonial-era wills and land grants show interactions with families documented in Plymouth Colony records, Connecticut Colony land purchases, and the Province of Pennsylvania proprietary archives. By the 18th century, members appear in legal proceedings archived at the National Archives (United Kingdom) and the Library of Congress, appearing alongside contemporaries recorded in Hudson River Valley property ledgers and Philadelphia merchant lists.

Prominent Members and Lineages

Notable branches include industrialists who founded firms in Ilion, New York, patent-holders connected to United States Patent Office filings, and statesmen who served in legislatures such as the New York State Assembly and the United States House of Representatives. Lineages intermarried with families listed in directories like the Social Register, connecting to surnames prominent in Gilded Age society and to figures associated with Tammany Hall politics. Genealogies appear in compilations alongside entries for families from Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania elites documented by Historical Society of Pennsylvania and New-York Historical Society.

Business, Industry, and Philanthropy

Business ventures founded or led by family members include firms in arms manufacturing, publishing, and manufacturing linked to markets in Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York Stock Exchange listings. Associates and investors engaged with entities such as the Remington Arms Company, craft suppliers for United States Army, and suppliers for transcontinental rail projects recorded by the Union Pacific Railroad. Philanthropic initiatives endowed chairs at Yale University, funded programs at Smithsonian Institution, supported galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and contributed to hospitals like NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital. Financial dealings appear in ledgers alongside firms listed in the Wall Street Journal and agreements recorded in New York Supreme Court filings.

Political and Military Involvement

Members served in municipal offices in New York City and in state legislatures including New York State Senate and Connecticut House of Representatives, and held federal appointments under administrations recorded in the United States Presidential Cabinet rosters. Military service includes commissions in units raised for the American Revolutionary War, militia rolls during the War of 1812, volunteer regiments in the American Civil War, and ordnance work supporting World War I logistics. Records show interactions with figures from the Continental Congress, correspondences housed with papers of George Washington, and service listings paralleling those in National Archives and Records Administration collections.

Cultural and Artistic Contributions

Artists and patrons in the family supported painters, sculptors, and photographers associated with exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Collectors donated works by creators who exhibited at the Armory Show and corresponded with curators from the National Portrait Gallery. Members commissioned illustrations for periodicals such as Harper's Magazine and supported composers whose scores were performed at Carnegie Hall. Literary connections include correspondence with authors represented by Harper & Brothers, donations to collections at New York Public Library, and patronage of playwrights whose works premiered on Broadway.

Legacy and Historic Properties

Historic houses, factories, and estates associated with the family appear on registers like the National Register of Historic Places and in surveys by the Historic American Buildings Survey. Properties include industrial complexes in Ilion, New York, residences in New Haven, Connecticut, and estates on Long Island recorded in county deeds held by Suffolk County, New York clerks. Archival material related to the family is preserved in repositories such as the Smithsonian Institution Archives, the Walters Art Museum collections, and regional historical societies including the New-York Historical Society. The family's name persists in place names, corporate histories, and museum catalogues compiled by institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Library of Congress.

Category:American families