List of people from the Upper East Side
Appearance
The Upper East Side is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It has a long tradition of being home to some of the world's most wealthy, powerful and influential families and individuals.
A
[edit]- Roman Abramovich (born 1966) – businessman, investor, and politician[1]
- Ronnie Abrams (born 1968), US judge
- Woody Allen (born 1935) – film director, writer, and actor[2]
- Herbert Allen Jr. (born 1940) – businessman[3]
- George B. Agnew (1868–1941) – politician[4]
- Rand Araskog (1931–2021) – businessman[5]
- Elizabeth Arden (1878–1966) – businesswoman[6]
- Brooke Astor (1902–2007) – philanthropist and widow of Vincent Astor[7]
- Caroline Schermerhorn Astor (1930–2008) – socialite[8]
- John Jacob Astor IV (1864–1912) – businessman, real estate builder, investor, inventor, writer, lieutenant colonel in the Spanish–American War, who was a passenger on the RMS Titanic and chose to remain on the ship when it sank[9]
- Vincent Astor (1891–1959) – businessman, philanthropist, and member of the prominent Astor family[10]
- William Acquavella (born 1937/38) – art dealer[11]
B
[edit]- Louis Bacon – hedge fund manager[12]
- Jules Bache – banker[13]
- Tallulah Bankhead – actress[14]
- Joseph Baratta investor[15]
- Amzi L. Barber – asphalt tycoon[16]
- Demas Barnes – politician and a United States Representative from New York[17]
- Bernard Baruch – financier[18]
- Robert Bass – businessman and philanthropist[15]
- William Bates – physician[19]
- Stephen Vincent Benét – poet[20]
- Olivier Berggruen – art historian and curator[21]
- Leonard Bernstein – composer, conductor
- Edward Julius Berwind – coal mining magnate[22]
- Heber R. Bishop – businessman and jade collector
- Leon Black – hedge fund manager[23]
- Lloyd Blankfein – banker[24]
- Len Blavatnik – businessman, investor, and philanthropist[25]
- Michael Bloomberg – billionaire philanthropist and former mayor of New York City[26]
- René Bouché – artist and fashion illustrator[27]
- John Vernou Bouvier III – socialite, Wall Street stockbroker, and father of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Lee Radziwill[28]
- Eli Broad – entrepreneur[24]
- Irving Brokaw – heir, figure skater, first American to compete in an olympic winter sport.
- Isaac Vail Brokaw – clothing merchant[29]
- Charles Bronfman – businessman and philanthropist[30]
- Edgar Bronfman Jr. – businessman[31]
- Edgar Bronfman Sr. – businessman and philanthropist[32]
- Matthew Bronfman – businessman, entrepreneur and philanthropist[33]
- Arthur William Brown – illustrator[34]
- Catherine Wolfe Bruce – philanthropist[35]
- Yul Brynner – actor[36]
- Patricia Buckley – socialite[37]
- William F. Buckley Jr. – author[37]
- Tory Burch – fashion designer[38]
- I. Townsend Burden – heir
- James A. Burden Jr. – industrialist[39][40]
C
[edit]- John T. Cahill – lawyer[41]
- Hervey C. Calkin – U.S. Representative[42]
- Anthony Campagna – real estate developer[43]
- Truman Capote – novelist[44][45]
- Mariah Carey – singer
- Andrew Carnegie – industrialist[46]
- Phoebe Cates – actress
- Dick Cavett – comedian and former talk show host
- Marc Chagall – artist[47]
- Robert Chambers – the "Preppie Killer" of Jennifer Levin
- Walid Chammah – executive[24]
- James Chanos – investor[15]
- Gustavo Cisneros – businessman[48]
- Huguette Clark – heiress[49]
- James H. Clark – Netscape founder[50]
- William A. Clark – politician and entrepreneur[51]
- Jill Clayburgh – actress[52]
- Montgomery Clift – actor[53]
- Gifford A. Cochran – entrepreneur and sportsman[54]
- George M. Cohan – entertainer, playwright, composer, lyricist, actor, singer, dancer and producer[53]
- Charles Cohen – real estate developer[55]
- Michael Cohen – attorney for Donald Trump[56]
- Roy Cohn – lawyer, mentor to Donald Trump
- George Condo – artist[57]
- Sean Connery – actor[58]
- Mark Consuelos – actor[59]
- Barbara Corcoran – businesswoman, investor, speaker, consultant, syndicated columnist, author, and television personality[60]
- Katie Couric – journalist[61]
- Simon Cowell – television judge and producer[62]
- Gardner Cowles Jr. – publisher[5]
- Ann Coulter – author, political commentator, columnist[63]
- Joan Crawford – actress[53]
- Aimée Crocker (1864–1941) – heiress, princess, author, world traveler
- George Crocker – businessman[64]
D
[edit]- Alexandra Daddario – actress[65]
- Matthew Daddario – actor[66]
- Antonio Damasio – neuroscientist[67]
- Rodney Dangerfield – comedian, actor
- William Augustus Darling – politician[68]
- Norman Davis – diplomat[69]
- Edward Coleman Delafield – Colonel and banker[17]
- John DeLorean – engineer, inventor and executive in the U.S. automobile industry[70]
- Oleg Deripaska – oligarch and philanthropist[citation needed]
- Joan Didion – author[71]
- C. Douglas Dillon – diplomat and politician[72]
- Jamie Dimon – banker[73]
- Bob Diamond – former group chief executive of Barclays plc[citation needed]
- James Dinan – hedge fund manager[74]
- Julio Mario Santo Domingo – diplomat[5]
- Plácido Domingo – tenor, conductor and arts administrator[75]
- Marta Domingo – opera soprano, stage director and designer[75]
- Shaun Donovan (born 1966) – former US Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and Director of the Office of Management and Budget, running for Mayor of New York City
- Glenn Dubin – hedge fund manager[76]
- James Buchanan Duke – businessman[77]
- Henry J. Duveen – art dealer
- Charles Dyson – businessman[78]
- James Dyson – inventor, industrial design engineer and founder of the Dyson company[79]
E
[edit]- Cheryl Eisen – interior designer[80]
- Robert H. Ellsworth – art dealer[81]
- Richard Engel – journalist
- Israel Englander – hedge fund manager[82]
- Jeffrey Epstein – financier and registered sex offender[83]
- Walker Evans – photographer, at 112 East 74th Street[84]
F
[edit]- Sherman Fairchild – aviation pioneer[85]
- Linda Fairstein (born 1947) – prosecutor and author
- Philip Falcone – businessman[15]
- José Fanjul – sugar baron[86]
- Mia Farrow – actress
- Barbara Feldon – actress
- Jay S. Fishman – insurance executive
- Marshall Field – entrepreneur[5]
- Stephen Feinberg – investor[87]
- Michael Feinstein – singer[88]
- Edna Ferber – writer[53]
- J. Christopher Flowers – investor[89]
- Karen Finerman – hedge fund manager and television personality[90]
- Jonathan Franzen – National Book Award-winning novelist
- Paul J. Fribourg – businessman[91]
- Henry Clay Frick – industrialist, financier, union-buster, and art patron[92]
- Richard S. Fuld, Jr. – banker[93]
G
[edit]- Lady Gaga – singer
- Gerald Garson – former NY Supreme Court Justice convicted of accepting bribes
- Ina Garten – author[94]
- Bruce Gelb – businessman and diplomat[95]
- Gordon Getty – businessman, investor, philanthropist and classical music composer[11]
- Pia Getty – filmmaker[96]
- Sarah Michelle Gellar – actress
- James W. Gerard – lawyer and diplomat[97]
- Ricky Gervais – comedian, actor
- John Giorno – artist
- Rudy Giuliani – politician, attorney, businessman, public speaker, former mayor of New York City, and attorney to President Donald Trump[98]
- Barbara Goldsmith – author, journalist, and philanthropist[99]
- Danielle Goldstein (born 1985) – American-Israeli show jumper[100]
- Lawrence E. Golub – entrepreneur, philanthropist, and business executive[90]
- Murray H. Goodman – real estate developer[101]
- Noam Gottesman – hedge fund manager[102]
- Jay Gould – railroad developer[103]
- Ulysses S. Grant – 18th President of the United States, Commanding General of the Army, soldier, international statesman, and author[97]
- Peter Grauer – Chairman Bloomberg L.P.[86]
- Kenneth C. Griffin – hedge fund manager[11]
- Bob Guccione – photographer[104]
- Daphne Guinness – heiress, socialite, fashion designer, art collector, model, musician, film producer and actor[105]
- Meyer Guggenheim – patriarch of the Guggenheim family[106]
- Simon Guggenheim – politician[107]
- Randolph Guggenheimer – lawyer[108]
- Thomas Guinzburg – publisher[37]
- John Gutfreund – investment banker[37]
H
[edit]- J. Hooker Hamersley – heir, lawyer and poet[109]
- W. Averell Harriman – governor of New York[54]
- Kitty Carlisle Hart – singer, advocate for the arts and historic preservation[37]
- Henry Osborne Havemeyer – industrialist[110]
- Millicent Hearst – wife of media tycoon William Randolph Hearst[11]
- Drue Heinz – patron of the literary arts, actress, philanthropist and socialite[111]
- Ariel Helwani – mixed martial arts writer
- Ernest Hemingway – writer [112]
- Jim Henson – puppeteer, artist, cartoonist, inventor, screenwriter, and filmmaker[31]
- Leon Hess – founder and President of Hess Corporation and one-time owner of the New York Jets[113]
- David M. Heyman (1891–1984) – financier, philanthropist, art collector[114]
- Tommy Hilfiger – fashion designer[104]
- J. Tomilson Hill – investor[115]
- Henry Hilton – jurist and businessman[116]
- Dennis Hoey – actor[117]
- Lena Horne – singer[118]
- Vladimir Horowitz – pianist and composer[119]
- Alan Howard – hedge fund manager[120]
I
[edit]J
[edit]- Michael Jackson – singer[122]
- Jeremy Jacobs, Sr. – owner of the Boston Bruins[123]
- Morton L. Janklow – literary agent[37]
- Jasper Johns – artist[124]
- Boris Johnson – Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
- Woody Johnson – businessman, philanthropist, and diplomat[125]
- Star Jones – lawyer, television personality[126]
K
[edit]- Harry Kargman – CEO of Kargo[127]
- Jill Kargman – author, writer and actress[127]
- Herbert Kasper – fashion designer[37]
- George S. Kaufman – playwright[128]
- Slim Keith – socialite[37]
- Caroline Kennedy – author and diplomat to Japan, and daughter of U.S. President John F. Kennedy
- James Powell Kernochan – businessman and clubman[129]
- Otto Hermann Kahn – investment banker, collector, philanthropist, and patron of the arts[130]
- Kevin Kline – actor
- Stephen King – author [131]
- Sante Kimes – criminal[104]
- David H. Koch – businessman, philanthropist, conservative political activist
- Frederick R. Koch – collector and philanthropist[132]
- Doron Kochavi – businessman, lawyer, philanthropist
- Pannonica de Koenigswarter – jazz patron and writer[128]
- Jeff Koons – artist
- Jerzy Kosiński – novelist[133]
- Bruce Kovner – hedge fund manager[134]
- Dennis Kozlowski – former CEO of Tyco International[135]
- Nicola Kraus – novelist[136]
- Peter S. Kraus – businessman, philanthropist and art collector[137]
- Henry Kravis – investor[76]
- Jared Kushner – investor, real-estate developer, newspaper publisher, senior advisor to President Donald Trump[138]
L
[edit]- Thomas W. Lamont – banker[139]
- Marc Lasry – hedge fund manager[122]
- Aerin Lauder – businesswoman[140]
- Jane Lauder – businesswoman[141]
- Leonard Lauder – businessman, art collector and humanitarian[142]
- William Lauder – businessman, and executive chairman of the Estée Lauder Companie
- Matt Lauer – news anchor[143]
- Charles Lazarus – founder of Toys R Us[86]
- Lewis Cass Ledyard – lawyer[133]
- Harper Lee – author[144]
- Spike Lee – film director and producer
- William B. Leeds – businessman[145]
- Louise Linton – actress[146]
- Loida Nicolas Lewis – businesswoman who is the widow of TLC Beatrice founder and CEO Reginald Lewis[147]
- Robert I. Lipp – businessman
- John Langeloth Loeb Jr. – businessman, philanthropist, former United States Ambassador to Denmark, and former Delegate to the United Nations[148]
M
[edit]- John J. Mack – banker[24]
- Julie Macklowe – beauty entrepreneur and businesswoman[149]
- Andrew Madoff – stockbroker and investment advisor[150][151]
- Bernard Madoff – ex-hedge fund manager convicted of running a Ponzi scheme
- Carolyn Maloney, politician, former member of United States House of Representatives and the New York City Council
- Stewart and Cyril Marcus – gynecologists[104]
- Soong Mei-ling – former First Lady of the Republic of China, known as Madame Chiang Kai-shek or Madame Chiang
- Princess Madeleine, Duchess of Hälsingland and Gästrikland – Duchess of Hälsingland and Gästrikland[152]
- Madonna – entertainer; purchased $40 million mansion on East 81st Street at Lexington Avenue in 2009
- Anne Windfohr Marion – rancher, horse breeder, business executive, philanthropist, and art collector[11]
- Barbara Margolis – prisoners' rights advocate, official greeter of New York City[153]
- Howard Marks – investor[154]
- Paul Marks – medical doctor, researcher and administrator[155]
- Malachi Martin – author
- Wednesday Martin – author[156]
- J. Ezra Merkin – hedge fund manager[157]
- Rachel Lambert Mellon – horticulturalist, gardener, philanthropist, and art collector[158]
- Charles E. Merrill – philanthropist, stockbroker, and co-founder of Merrill Lynch[111]
- Howard Michaels – founder of the real estate investment advisory firm the Carlton Group[159]
- Bette Midler – singer[160]
- George W. Miller – politician[161]
- Robert Mnuchin – banker[162]
- Steven Mnuchin – investment banker, film producer, hedge fund manager, and Secretary of the US Treasury [163]
- Mary Tyler Moore – actress, producer, and social advocate, at 927 Fifth Avenue at East 74th Street
- Sonja Morgan[164]
- Robert Moses – city planner, public official, referred to as the "master builder" of New York
- Levi P. Morton – 22nd Vice President of the United States, ambassador, and former governor of New York[165]
- Charles Murphy – hedge fund manager[166]
- James Murdoch – businessman[167]
- Rupert Murdoch – media mogul[168]
- Wendi Deng Murdoch – businesswoman, and movie producer[169]
- Arthur Murray – dancer[11]
N
[edit]- Spyros Niarchos – shipping magnate[5]
- Cynthia Nixon – LGBTQ actress and politician/activist
- Peggy Noonan – speechwriter for Ronald Reagan, political commentator and author
- Deborah Norville – television anchor and businesswoman
O
[edit]- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis – former First Lady of the United States[104]
- Stanley O'Neal – banker[24]
- Chris Noth – actor[170]
- Frederick Osborn – philanthropist, military leader, and eugenicist[161]
- Katharina Otto-Bernstein – filmmaker[171]
P
[edit]- Ashraf Pahlavi – twin sister of the deposed Shah[172]
- William S. Paley – executive[11]
- Vikram Pandit – banker[24]
- Dorothy Parker – poet, short story writer, critic, and satirist
- Carlos Rodriguez-Pastor – businessman[48]
- Joan Whitney Payson – heiress, businesswoman, philanthropist, patron of the arts and art collector, and a member of the prominent Whitney family[173]
- Sister Parish – interior decorator and socialite[174]
- Antenor Patiño – tycoon[175]
- George Plimpton – author, humorist, NFL quarterback
- Generoso Pope – Italian-American businessman and newspaper publisher, lived at 1040 Fifth Avenue
- Zac Posen – fashion designer[176]
- John Paulson – hedge fund manager[177]
- Nelson Peltz – investor[178]
- Holly Peterson – producer, journalist and novelist[179]
- Peter George Peterson – investment banker and United States Secretary of Commerce[177]
- Milton Petrie – retail investor[37]
- Ronald Perelman – investor[180]
- Antonio Permuy, writer, curator, and art patron
- Peter O. Price – media proprietor[37]
- Harold Prince – theatrical producer and director[181]
- Joseph Pulitzer – newspaper publisher[182]
R
[edit]- Lee Radziwill – princess, sister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Lynn Pressman Raymond – toy and game innovator, president of the Pressman Toy Corporation[183]
- Stewart Rahr – pharmaceuticals magenta[184]
- Michael Rapaport – actor, internet personality, podcaster
- Robert Redford – actor[185]
- Ira Rennert – investor and businessman[186]
- Kelly Ripa – talk show host[59]
- Joan Rivers – comedian[187]
- David Rockefeller – banker[188]
- John D. Rockefeller Jr. – financier and philanthropist[180]
- Laurance Rockefeller – philanthropist, businessman, financier, and major conservationist[37]
- Felix Rohatyn – investment banker[189]
- Julia Restoin Roitfeld – art director and model[190]
- Eleanor Roosevelt – political figure, diplomat and activist[128]
- Theodore Roosevelt – U.S. president, represented Upper East Side in New York State Assembly at beginning of his political career.
- Elihu Root – former Secretary of State[191]
- Christopher Ross – sculptor, designer and collector
- Steve Ross – CEO of Time Warner[180]
- James Rorimer – museum director[192]
- Aby Rosen – real estate developer[193]
- Alexander Rovt – real estate investor[194]
- Marc Rowan – investor[195]
- Helena Rubinstein – businesswoman, art collector, and philanthropist[196]
- Serge Rubinstein – stock and currency manipulator and murder victim[53]
- Jacob Ruppert – brewer[104]
- Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz Al Saud – Saudi royal
S
[edit]- Lily Safra – philanthropist and socialite[197]
- Walter J. Salmon Sr. – real estate developer[198]
- Nassef Sawiris – CEO[86]
- Jacob Schiff – banker[199]
- Rose Schlossberg – filmmaker
- Tatiana Schlossberg – journalist and author
- Jack Schlossberg – writer[200]
- Martin Scorsese – film director and producer[201]
- Stephen Schwarzman – businessman[202]
- Arthur Hawley Scribner – president of Charles Scribner's Sons[203]
- Charles R. Schwab – investor, financial executive, and philanthropist[204]
- Ryan Seacrest – radio personality, television host, and producer[205]
- Terry Semel – Yahoo! CEO[11]
- Bishop Sheen – religious leader
- Leonard Sillman – broadway producer[27]
- David Simon – CEO of Simon Malls
- Ramona Singer – TV personality[206]
- Harry Slatkin – businessman, entrepreneur, and philanthropist[207]
- William Douglas Sloane – businessman, sportsman, philanthropist[208]
- Al Smith – former governor of New York[11]
- George Soros – hedge fund manager[209]
- Andy Spade – fashion designer[210]
- Kate Spade – fashion designer[210]
- Jerry Speyer – real estate developer[211]
- Carl Spielvogel – ambassador to the Slovak Republic[212]
- Eliot Spitzer – former Governor of New York[213]
- Kenneth I. Starr – money manager[214]
- John Steinbeck – author[215]
- Saul Steinberg – businessman[5]
- Benjamin Steinbruch – CEO[86]
- Gloria Steinem – journalist[216]
- Michael Steinhardt – financier[217]
- George Stephanopoulos – journalist, political commentator and former Democratic advisor[218]
- Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes – architect[219]
- Willard Dickerman Straight – investment banker, publisher, reporter, Army Reserve officer, diplomat and by marriage, a member of the Whitney family[134]
- Jesse I. Straus – ambassador to France[220]
- Roger Williams Straus Jr. – entrepreneur[39]
- Igor Stravinsky – composer[53]
- Margaret Rockefeller Strong – activist[221]
- Robert L. Stuart – industrialist[222]
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, publisher and businessman[223]
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr. – publisher[223]
- Sy Syms – founder and owner of Syms Corporation discount clothing retailer and benefactor of Yeshiva University's Syms School of Business[224]
T
[edit]- Elie Tahari – fashion designer[225]
- A. Alfred Taubman – businessman, investor, and philanthropist[226]
- Margaretta Taylor – media heiress[23]
- John Thain – banker[227]
- Chloe Temtchine – singer-songwriter[228]
- Jonathan Tisch – Chairman and CEO of Loews Hotels & Co.[229]
- Ronn Torossian – public relations executive[230]
- Donald Trump Jr. – businessman and former reality television personality[231]
- Ivana Trump – former model and businesswoman, who was the first wife of Donald Trump[232]
- Ivanka Trump – American businesswoman, fashion designer, author, reality television personality, daughter of Donald Trump[138]
- Vanessa Trump – socialite, actress and former model[75]
U
[edit]- James Ramsey Ullman – writer and mountaineer[58]
- Roberto Mangabeira Unger – philosopher and politician
- Louis Untermeyer – author, anthologist, editor, poet[72]
V
[edit]- Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt – wife of Cornelius Vanderbilt II
- Anne Harriman Vanderbilt – heiress[111]
- Gloria Vanderbilt – artist, author, actress, fashion designer, heiress, and socialite[233]
- William Kissam Vanderbilt II – motor racing enthusiast and yachtsman[234]
- Margit Varga – artist, painter, gallerist, art director, journalist[235]
- Gary Vaynerchuk – entrepreneur, author, speaker and Internet personality[236]
- Leila and Massimo Vignelli – designers[237]
- Vincent Viola – businessman[238]
- Anthony Volpe – baseball player
W
[edit]- Mike Wallace – journalist[37]
- Vera Wang – fashion designer[82]
- Felix M. Warburg[239]
- James Warburg – banker[240]
- Paul Warburg – banker[54]
- Andy Warhol – artist
- Bruce Wasserstein (1947-2009) – investment banker[241]
- Franz Waxman – composer[242]
- Sigourney Weaver – actress
- Susan Weber - historian[42]
- Michel David-Weill – banker[11]
- Boaz Weinstein – hedge fund manager[15]
- Les Wexner – businessman[243]
- Lawrence Grant White – architect[244]
- Mary Jo White – Chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission[75]
- William Collins Whitney – political leader and financier[16]
- Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney – sculptor, art patron, collector, and founder of the Whitney Museum of American Art[16]
- Elie Wiesel – Holocaust survivor and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986[245]
- Elisha Wiesel (born 1972) – chief information officer of Goldman Sachs; hedge fund manager of the Niche Plus; son of Elie Wiesel
- Alec N. Wildenstein – businessman, art dealer, racehorse owner, and breeder[246]
- Jocelyn Wildenstein – socialite[246]
- Robert B. Willumstad – CEO of AIG[24]: 765
- P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975) – author[247]
- Tom Wolfe – novelist, founder of New Journalism[248][249]
- Jayne Wrightsman – philanthropist[11]
Y
[edit]- Charles Yerkes – financier[110]
Z
[edit]- Pia Zadora – actress[104]
- Paula Zahn – journalist[135]
- Jeff Zucker – media executive[250]
- Mortimer Zuckerman – media mogul[135]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Schulz, Dana. "Roman Abramovich buys fourth townhouse on Upper East Side block for $96M mega-mansion". 6sqft.
- ^ Day, Sherri. "Disappointment for Woody Allen, But Not at Box Office". The New York Times, March 26, 2004. Accessed August 18, 2019. "The state's highest court yesterday dismissed an effort to halt construction of a 10-story building on the Upper East Side, ending a six-year battle that pitted Woody Allen and a group of fellow Upper East Siders against the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission."
- ^ Willet, Meagan. "House of the Day: Heirs To A Banking Legend Sell His Swanky Park Ave. Penthouse For $20 Million". Business Insider.
- ^ Miller, Tom (June 15, 2018). "The George Bliss Agnew House - 121 East 69th Street". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f Gross, Michael (11 March 2004). "Where the Boldface Bunk". The New York Times.
- ^ "Elizabeth Arden Is Dead at 81; Made Beauty a Global Business; Elizabeth Arden Dies Here At 81", The New York Times, October 19, 1966. Accessed August 18, 2019. "Mrs. Elizabeth N. Graham, (Elizabeth Arden), who built a multimillion-dollar business in beauty salons, cosmetics and clothes and who was one of the country's leading race-horse, owners, died of a heart attack yesterday morning at Lenox Hill Hospital. She was stricken Monday evening at her 10-room apartment at 834 Fifth Avenue and admitted to the hospital at 7 P.M. by her physician, Dr. George W. Slaughter."
- ^ Zimmer, Amy. "$100M Brooke Astor Estate Settlement Reached" Archived September 4, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, DNAinfo.com, March 28, 2012. Accessed September 3, 2017. "The five-year fight over the estate of Upper East Side doyenne Brooke Astor has been settled, paving the way for $100 million to start flowing to charities, the New York Attorney General's office announced Wednesday."
- ^ Horsley, Carter B. (n.d.). "The Upper East Side Book: Fifth Avenuie: Temple Emanu-El". The City Review. Retrieved November 23, 2018.
- ^ Young, Michael. "A guide to the gilded age mansions of 5th Avenue's millionaire row". 6sqft.
- ^ Miller, Tom (March 23, 2011). "The Vincent Astor House – No. 130 East 80th Street". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k David, Mark (May 12, 2009). "A Peep Into and A Poke Around 820 Fifth Avenue". Vanity Fair.
- ^ "Hedge Fund Manager Louis Bacon Buys in 888 Park Ave & More From This Week's Round Up of Top Sales". City Realty.
- ^ Miller, Tom (April 9, 2014). "The Jules S. Bache Carriage House -- No. 163 E. 70th Street". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ Walker, Ameena (23 July 2018). "Hollywood icon's former Upper East Side home now a $22K/month rental".
- ^ a b c d e Stanger, Melisa. "The Most Expensive Homes In Financ". Business Insider.
- ^ a b c Miller, Tom (September 23, 2013). "The Lost Wm. Whitney Mansion – No. 871 Fifth Avenue". Daytonian in Manhattan.
- ^ a b Miller, Tom (September 12, 2018). "The William Bliss House – 6 East 65th Street". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved October 1, 2018.
- ^ Horsley, Carter. "4 East 66th Street". City Realty. Retrieved July 6, 2018.
- ^ Miller, Tom. "The Block That Refused to Update – East 64th Street, Madison to Park Avenues". Daytonian in Manhattan.
- ^ Malanowinski, Jamie (August 1987). "Dead & Famous". Spy.
- ^ "The Curator — Olivier Berggruen - Steinway & Sons". www.steinway.com. Retrieved 2024-03-17.
- ^ Miller, Tom (September 2, 2013). "The Lost Kerochan Mansion -- No. 824 Fifth Avenue". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ a b Solomont. "Where the billionaires live". The Real Deal.
- ^ a b c d e f g Sorkin, Andrew. Too Big To Fail. Penguin Randomhouse.
- ^ "Wild Wildenstein Mansion Sells for $42.5 M.; Brooke Astor's Butler on the Deed!". The New York Observer. July 15, 2008. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
- ^ Marino, Vivian. "A $14 Million Co-op for Michael R. Bloomberg", The New York Times, April 15, 2016. Accessed September 3, 2017. "Former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, apparently looking to someday create a double-wide mansion for himself on the Upper East Side, paid $14,000,000 for a triplex at the co-op townhouse next to his Beaux-Arts limestone house."
- ^ a b Miller, Tom (May 19, 2016). "The Delafield-Bloomberg Mansion – No. 17 East 79th Street". Daytonian in Manhattan. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Edward Klein (1997). All Too Human: The Love Story of Jack and Jackie Kennedy. Simon and Schuster. p. 36. ISBN 9780671501914.
- ^ Bear, Rob (9 February 2012). "Looking back at Manhattan's lost Gilded Age mansions". Curbed NY.
- ^ "Charles Bronfman Apartment Sold For $19.9M". The Huffington Post Canada. The Huffington Post. 18 February 2014. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
- ^ a b "James Murdoch "cashes out" of townhouse with $24M loan". The Real Deal New York. November 14, 2013. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ Dailey, Jessica (6 March 2014). "Edgar Bronfman's $65M Fifth Ave. Penthouse Officially Listed". Curbed New York. Vox Media. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
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