William Goodsell Rockefeller (May 21, 1870 – November 30, 1922) was a director of the Consolidated Textile Company and a member of the prominent Rockefeller family.[1]
Although he was predicted by Thomas W. Lawson to be the future head of Standard Oil, the prediction did not prove true. Following his graduation from Yale, he suffered a serious attack of typhoid fever before entering 26 Broadway.[1] Rockefeller was treasurer of the Standard Oil Company of New York for several years until his retirement in 1911.[1]
On November 21, 1895, Rockefeller married Sarah Elizabeth "Elsie" Stillman, daughter of National City Bank president James Jewett Stillman and Sarah Elizabeth Rumrill.[3] Rockefeller's father had become a large shareholder of the National City Bank and his alliance with the Stillman family was sealed by the marriage of his two sons with two Stillman daughters. Rockefeller's brother, Percy Avery Rockefeller, married Elsie's sister, Isabel Goodrich Stillman.[1] Together, William and Elsie were the parents of four sons and a daughter:[4]
William Avery Rockefeller III (1896–1973),[5] who married Florence Lincoln (1897–1998), sister of Frederic W. Lincoln IV, in 1918.[6]
Almira Geraldine Rockefeller (1907–1997),[12] who married M. Roy Jackson in 1929.[13] After his death in 1944, she remarried in 1945 to Samuel Weston Scott.[14]
^"James S. Rockefeller, 102, Dies; Was a Banker and a '24 Olympian". New York Times. August 11, 2004. Retrieved September 16, 2012. James Stillman Rockefeller, who helped capture an Olympic rowing title for the United States before a banking career with a company that eventually become Citigroup, died yesterday at his home in Greenwich, Conn., his family announced. He was 102. ...
^"Almira Scott Of Edgemont, 89". The New York Times. June 14, 1997. Retrieved January 11, 2011. Almira R. Scott, 89, of Kirkwood Farm, Edgemont, a horsewoman, died Wednesday of heart failure at the medical care facility at Dunwoody Village. ...