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I'd like to conduct research at the Rockefeller Archive Center. What do I need to do?
Appointments are required. Contact us in writing, via email, fax, or
mail with a brief description of your research project, the names of individuals and institutions that
are central to the study, the years covered by the study, and any geographic restrictions on the study.
A staff member will respond with a description of the scope and content of relevant materials in the
collections and to schedule an appointment. The Center's staff can respond most efficiently and
effectively to inquiries that are specific. Also see the Grant section for a
description of our grant program.
Is the Rockefeller Archive Center open to the public?
We encourage scholars to do research at the Center, but because of limited space in the reading room, appointments are required. The Archive Center is not generally open to the public outside of scholarly research. Its grounds and facilities are not available for weddings or other such events.
I've set up an appointment to do research at the Archive Center. What do I need to know in advance?
I have a minor question that doesn't merit a visit to the Center - can you help me?
For questions not relating directly to our collections, please review the Frequently Asked Questions, the links section, and the family tree. If these sources do not answer your question, you may contact us by email and we will try to help.
How do I find what I'm looking for on the website?
There is a navigation bar on every page which breaks the information on our site into main categories and sub-categories. The site index displays every page on the site in an outline form. Use the search engine for a more defined search.
I can't see/download some files on your website, what's wrong?
Some features on our website require special software which are all available to download for free on the internet. The introductory movie on our homepage requires Flash. To view "Unhooking the Hookworm", you need Quicktime. To read any .pdf documents or forms, you need Adobe Reader.
I'm experiencing problems viewing the website - what should I do?
If you notice a major problem or error on our website, please contact us.
What kind of causes have the Rockefellers funded?
Visitors and researchers at the Rockefeller Archive Center often are surprised to learn of the international scope and the broad range of subjects that have received support from the philanthropy of the Rockefeller family.
"Rockefeller philanthropy" is the short-hand term that encompasses both the combined personal charitable gifts of members of the Rockefeller family and the grants awarded by the various philanthropic institutions established
by generations of family members. Documents at the Rockefeller Archive Center trace this rich legacy back to 1855, when John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) first went to work in Cleveland, Ohio, and began to donate part of his
earnings to the Baptist church he attended. Rockefeller entered the oil business in the 1860s and in 1870 founded the Standard Oil Company, which grew to dominate the oil industry and made Rockefeller and his partners wealthy
men. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (1874-1960) joined his father's office in 1897 but soon focused his efforts on philanthropy rather than business and helped his father develop several major institutions in medical science,
education, and philanthropy. Together, he and his wife Abby (1874-1948) expanded the Rockefeller philanthropic legacy in new directions, such as art and historic preservation, and passed the family tradition of philanthropic
stewardship on to their children - Abby (1903-1976), John 3rd (1906-1978), Nelson (1908-1979), Laurance (1910-2004)), Winthrop (1912-1973), and David (b. 1915), known collectively as the Brothers generation. They, in turn,
have passed the legacy on to their children, the Cousins, such that four generations of Rockefeller family members have collaborated to establish major foundations - the Rockefeller Foundation (1913), the Rockefeller Brothers
Fund (1940) and the Rockefeller Family Fund (1967) - to address the collective concerns of their era, while particular family members also have established their own philanthropic institutions to address issues of concern to
them. Select Rockefeller Philanthropies offers a brief introduction to the subject.
What is the Rockefeller University Archives Campus Office and how is it related to the Rockefeller Archive Center?
The Campus Office of the Rockefeller University is headed by our campus archivist and serves the Rockefeller University faculty and staff. It also functions as an archival liaison office between the Archive Center and the University. The vast majority of the records of the University are not kept on campus but are at the Archive Center in Sleepy Hollow. The office does not have a reading room available for outside researchers, so researchers should plan to come to the Archive Center to use the University Archives. We also request that researchers do not contact both the Archive Center and the Campus Office with the same research question, since our response will be based on the same archival material.
Why were many of the papers of early members of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research donated to the archives of other institutions?
In the early years of the Rockefeller Institute, members were encouraged to donate their records to other institutions since the Institute did not have an archives. Some scientists chose archives based on their education or on other professional affiliations. The University Archives was first created as a function of the University library during the 1960s. The Rockefeller University became one of the founding institutions of the Rockefeller Archive Center, which opened in 1975. The researcher should be reminded that although the personal papers of these early scientists may be elsewhere, the University Archives does have much of the administrative records of these individuals as well as sets of their annual scientific reports. In some cases, there are extensive collections of reprints, photographs, and biographical material.
Which members of the RIMR/faculty at RU had some of their personal papers deposited at the American Philosophical Society (APS)
Harold Lindsay Amoss
Max Bergmann
Rufus Cole
Simon Flexner
Karl Landsteiner
James B. Murphy
Peter Olitzsky
Eugene Opie
Winthrop Osterhout
Thomas Rivers
Oswald Robertson
Peyton Rous
Florence Sabin
Leslie Webster
Where are the personal papers of Rockefeller University-related personnel?
Where are the papers of Rockefeller Family-related personnel and associates?
Where are the papers of Rockefeller Foundation-related papers in other repositories?
Appleget, Thomas B. - Brown University
Arnett, Trevor - University of Chicago
Arnold, Virginia - Boston University
Arnstein, Margaret Gene - Boston University
Barnard, Chester - Harvard University
Bates, Marston - University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library
Beard, Mary - Cornell University
Carter, Henry Rose - University of Virginia (Charlottesville)
Day, Edmund E. - Cornell University
Embree, Edwin - Yale University
Favrot, Leo M. - Tulane University
Ferrell, John A. - University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
Flexner, Abraham - Library of Congress
Flexner, Simon - American Philosophical Society
Fosdick, Raymond B. - Princeton University
Frank, Lawrence K. - National Library of Medicine
Gates, Frederick T. - Harvard Medical School
Grant, John B. - University of Puerto Rico Medical Sciences Campus Library
Greene, Jerome D. - Harvard University
Greene, Roger S. - Harvard University
Gregg, Alan - National Library of Medicine
Heiser, Victor - American Philosophical Society
Howland, Charles P. - Yale University
Jacocks, William P. - University of North Carolina
James, Henry (War Relief Commission papers) - Harvard University
Mason, Max - American Institute of Physics
Ruml, Beardsley - University of Chicago
Sawyer, Wilbur A. - National Library of Medicine
Smith, Hugh H. - Arizona College of Medicine
Soper, Fred L. - National Library of Medicine
Stevens, David - University of Chicago
Stokes, Anson Phelps - Yale University
Thompson, Kenneth - University of Virginia
Walcott, Frederic Collin - Yale University
Williamson, Charles Clarence - Columbia University
Where can I find the records of other foundations?
American Academy & Institute of Arts and Letters - In-house Library/Archives
Anna T. Jeanes Foundation - In Southern Education Foundation Records, Archives and Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Belgian American Educational Foundation, Inc. - The Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Buhl Foundation - The Zelienople (Pennsylvania) Historical Society
Bush Foundation - The Minnesota Historical Society
Carnegie Corporation of New York - Columbia University
Castle (Samuel N. and Mary) Foundation - Hawaiian Historical Society's Library
Chicago Community Trust - The Chicago Historical Society
Cleveland Foundation - The Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland
Duke Endowment - The Perkins Library at Duke University
Fels (Samuel S.) Fund - Historical Society of Pennsylvania
Field Foundation - Baker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin
Ford Foundation - The Ford Foundation Archives and Library
General Service Foundation - Minnesota Historical Society
Grant (William T.) Foundation - Teachers College, Columbia University
Grundy Foundation - The Margaret R. Grundy Memorial Library and Museum-foundation Complex in Bristol, Pennsylvania
Gund (The George) Foundation - Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland
Harmon Foundation - Library of Congress
Haynes (The John Randolph) and Dora Haynes Foundation - University of California at Los Angeles
Ittleson Foundation, Inc. - Payne Whitney, New York City
Jeanes (Anna T.) Foundation - In Southern Education Foundation Records, Archives and Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia
Julius Rosenwald Fund - Fisk University
Kempner (Harris and Eliza) Fund - Rosenberg Library, Galveston
Kentucky Foundation for Women - Duke University Manuscript Collection
Kettering (Charles F.) Foundation - Hoover Institute, Stanford University
Kress (Samuel H.) Foundation - Photographic Archives/National Gallery of Art
Kulas Foundation - Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio
Laurel Foundation - Hillman Library, University of Pittsburgh
Macarthur (John D. and Catherine T.) Foundation - In-house archives
Milbank Memorial Fund - Yale University
Negro Rural School Fund, Inc. - In Southern Education Foundation Records, Archives and Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library , Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia
New York Foundation - Leahy Business Archives
Noble (Edward John) Foundation, Inc. - In-house
Pew Charitable Trusts - Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, Delaware
Research Corporation - Smithsonian Archives; Library of Congress
Rosenwald (Julius) Fund - Fisk University
Saint Paul Foundation - The Minnesota Historical Society
San Francisco Foundation - The Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley
The Shubert Foundation, Inc. - In-house Archives
Slater (John F.) Fund - In Southern Education Foundation Records, Archives and Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Southern Education Foundation - Archives and Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Spencer Foundation - The University of Chicago
Van Ameringen Foundation, Inc. - Oscar Diethelm Historical Library, New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center
Weyerhaeuser Company Foundation - Weyerhaeuser Company Archives
Wilder (Amherst H.) Foundation - Minnesota Historical Society
(This list presents the results from the Rockefeller Archive Center's survey of the 1,000 largest foundations in the United States, conducted in 1988. Additional information on later deposits of foundation records was added in 1993 and in subsequent years.)
What should I keep and what should I throw out when saving Foundation papers?
Documenting Institutional History
The fundamental records that should be kept to document institutional history are:
correspondence; minutes; grant files; memoranda; charts/diagrams/plans; financial records; photographs.
Note: It is important to transfer documents to the archives in their original folders, binders or containers, so that the significance or organization of the records is clear.
Handwritten Documents
Normally, few handwritten documents are kept, but some may document crucial steps in institutional decision making or activity. When considering whether to keep handwritten documents, it is useful to distinguish between preliminary or fragmentary records (not to be kept) and those that document a unique event. Examples of handwritten records that could be kept are: notes of minutes of an informal meeting; notes of a telephone conversation; correspondence, including faxes.
Publications
Publications (books; articles; news clippings) should be retained in files when they relate directly to the subject matter of the files. For example: publications based on institutional support; programs of conferences or other events based on institutional support; articles and essays describing the institution's programs or activities .
Note: At the Rockefeller Archive Center book-length publications will be separated from the archives and cataloged as part of the library collection.
Visual Materials
Visual materials directly related to the subject matter of the files are valuable and should be retained. Keep photographs, films, and videos in all formats.
Note: At the Rockefeller Archive Center visual materials will be removed from the document files and arranged separately.
Computer Records
Computer records may be retained and transferred to the Archive Center on tape for
storage. However, because of the 20-year average lifetime of magnetic tape, that should be done only with information that is too bulky or too complex to store in other formats. Computer disks of all sorts should not be transferred because of their very short lifetime. The durability and accessibility of all computer-generated records are uncertain because of the lack of archival experience with such records, and because of rapid changes in computer technology. The guideline to follow if your think that certain electronic-based information, including email, should be retained permanently is: IF IN DOUBT, PRINT IT OUT.
Do Not Keep
Under usual circumstances do not keep the following: multiple copies of documents unless they have unique handwritten commentary; fax paper or other thermal sensitive paper (photocopy text onto bond paper); memorabilia, such as framed certificates, plaques, and medals.
A Final Note
If you are not sure whether an item is appropriate for the archives, keep it, because a final decision whether to keep or discard it will be made at the time of archival processing. A particular document may take on a greater or lesser significance as it is viewed in the context of other records in the archives.
Can you provide me with a family tree of the descendants of John D. Rockefeller?
As a matter of policy, the Rockefeller Archive Center does not provide information about, or access to unpublished materials about, living members of the Rockefeller family. A number of books published in recent years, including Ron Chernow's biography of John D. Rockefeller, Sr., Titan (1998), and Harr and Johnson's The Rockefeller Century (1988), contain genealogical charts for the Rockefeller family. Perhaps the most extensive is in The Rockefeller Family Home, Kykuit (1998), with photographs by Mary Louise Pierson and text by Ann Rockefeller Roberts. Henry Rockefeller's Rockefeller Genealogy has been reprinted and is available for purchase from the Higginson Book Company. The Higginson Book Company website is at http://www.higginsonbooks.com/.
I'm trying to confirm if a relative of mine worked for the Rockefellers. Can the Archive Center help?
The Archive Center often receives genealogical inquiries from people who have heard that a family member worked for the Rockefellers. These are difficult to trace, and very rarely are we able to confirm the story that is being conveyed to us. The difficulty lies both in the nature of the records and in the understandably unspecific nature of many of the requests: there is no good single body of material about Rockefeller family employees; the material that exists is not complete; and it is often unclear in which of the numerous Rockefeller households the person was supposed to have worked and when. When sufficient information is provided, the Archive Center's staff will check existing payroll records and various indexes to the extent possible. However, the results of such searches often are unsatisfying. We are well aware that even when we cannot confirm employment, we can never rule out the possibility that someone worked for the Rockefellers.
I'm researching my family tree. Can the Archive Center help?
The Rockefeller Archive Center focuses on the family of John D. Rockefeller, (1839-1937), founder of the Standard Oil Company and of several philanthropic boards. The collections at the Archive Center do not have much information about the Rockefeller family's genealogy beyond what is available in a series of publications, now out of print, from the Rockefeller Family Association, which, as far as we know, no longer exists. The publications include three volumes of Transactions of the Rockefeller Family Association, with Genealogy, Volume I, 1905-1909; Volume 2, 1910-1915; Volume 3, 1919-1925; and Volume IV, a compilation of the Rockefeller Genealogy, with no publication date. There is also a slim volume entitled R.F.A News, which is a collection of newsletters issued by the Association, 1927-1937. We do not have copies of these available for purchase, and the volumes in our library are too fragile for extensive photocopying.
However, these volumes have been reprinted and are available for purchase from the Higginson Book Company. The Higginson Book Company website is at http://www.higginsonbooks.com/.
Note: As a matter of policy, the Rockefeller Archive Center does not provide information about living members of the Rockefeller Family.
What is the Rockefeller connection with Cleveland, Ohio?
John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) was a resident of the Cleveland, Ohio, area for about thirty years. He moved to the area with his parents in 1853, attended school in Cleveland and got his first job there in 1855. He became a successful businessman in Cleveland and entered the oil business there, and Cleveland was home to the Standard Oil Company from its creation by Rockefeller in 1870 until it and Rockefeller moved to New York City in the early 1880s. It was in Cleveland that Rockefeller became one of the wealthiest men in the U.S. The Cleveland area also was the beneficiary of Rockefeller's philanthropy, beginning with his membership in and donations through the Erie Street Baptist Church as early as 1855.
About the only structure still standing in Cleveland with an association to Rockefeller is the Rockefeller Building at the corner of Superior and West 6th Street. Rockefeller also donated a lot of park land to the City of Cleveland -- Rockefeller Park -- and his former estate of Forest Hill became the site of Forest Hill Park on the border of Cleveland Heights and East Cleveland, as well as a housing development planned by his son, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in 1925.
More information on Rockefeller's impact on Cleveland may be found in the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. The numerous biographies of John D. Rockefeller discuss his Cleveland years in various depths, and one book, Grace Goulder's John D. Rockefeller: The Cleveland Years (Cleveland: Western Reserve Historical Society, 1972), focuses on Cleveland. In 2000 Jane Hirz, a documentary film producer in Cleveland, visited the Rockefeller Archive Center to produce a video, "Rockefeller in Cleveland," for the local public television station, WVIZ, that was broadcast that fall in conjunction with the multi-part series on the Rockefeller Family that was part of "The American Experience" on PBS.
The Rockefeller Archive Center holds a great deal of material on Rockefeller in Cleveland in terms of his ledgers and account books, correspondence, and photographs. The description of the John D. Rockefeller Sr. Papers outlines this material and includes some interesting links, one of which is a scanned image of one of the Charities Index cards on which Rockefeller recorded his charitable donations to the Cleveland Day Nursery and Kindergarten Association. A few of the Archive Center's online publications discuss Rockefeller in Cleveland. See especially the 1999 Newsletter, pp. 3-5. which reproduces one of his ledger pages and includes a photo of him from the 1860s; and the 2000 issue of Research Reports from the Rockefeller Archive Center, pp. 3-6, for an article on Rockefeller and civic affairs in Cleveland, and another photo of Rockefeller with family and friends at Forest Hill ca. 1881. In addition to these online materials, Ken Rose's essay, "Why a University for Chicago and Not Cleveland? Religion and John D. Rockefeller's Early Philanthropy, 1855-1900," deals with Rockefeller's philanthropy in Cleveland; it also is available from the Archive Center's website.
In May 1987, Joseph W. Ernst, Rockefeller Family Archivist and founding director of the Rockefeller Archive Center, calculated that John D. Rockefeller and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. together had given more than $5,520,000.00 to organizations in Cleveland.
John D. Rockefeller's contributions between 1855 and 1934 went to 178 different institutions and totaled $3,369,650. Nine institutions received 88% of these funds:
INSTITUTIONS GIFTS 1855-1934
Cleveland Parks $865,038.00
Euclid Avenue Baptist Church $727,754.00
Alta Social Settlement $308,429.00
Western Reserve University $262,500.00
YMCA $153,521.00
Case School of Applied Science $200,000.00
YWCA $153,521.00
Baptist City Mission $115,407.00
East End Baptist Church $112,262.00
Ernst also reported that John D. Rockefeller, Jr. gave gifts of $100,000 or more to four Cleveland insitutions: Forest Hill Park to East Cleveland and Cleveland Heights ($1,452,000); the Cleveland Orchestra ($250,000); the Cleveland Baptist Association ($131,000); and the Phyllis Wheatley Association ($101,000). He made large gifts to the Alta Social Settlement ($99,474); the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church ($78,1183); the Cleveland Community Fund ($30,000), and the Baptist Home of Northern Ohio ($9,131).
Source: Memo, Joe Ernst to George Taylor, May 19, 1987, Administrative Files of the Rockefeller Archive Center.
What companies were created by the breakup of the Standard Oil trust in 1911?
When the United States Supreme Court ruled in 1911 that the Standard Oil trust be dissolved, the Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) was reorganized into thirty-four new companies. As Rockefeller biographer Ron Chernow has pointed out, several of these companies enjoyed enormous success after 1911, "controlling a significant fraction of both the American and world oil industry. Rockefeller's stepchildren would be everywhere: Standard Oil of New Jersey (Exxon), Standard Oil of New York (Mobil), Standard Oil of Indiana (Amoco), Standard Oil of California (Chevron), Atlantic Refining (ARCO and eventually Sun). Continental Oil (Conoco), today a unit of DuPont, and Chesebrough-Ponds, which had begun by processing petroleum jelly. Three offspring-Exxon, Mobil, and Chevron - would belong to the Seven Sisters group that would dominate the world oil industry in the twentieth century; a fourth sister, British Petroleum, later took over Standard Oil of Ohio, then known as Sohio." (Chernow, Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. (1998), pp. 558-559)
The 34 companies to emerge from the dissolution of the Standard Oil Trust were:
Anglo-American Oil Company, Limited
Atlantic Refining Company - later Atlantic Richfield, then ARCO, and then Sun
Borne, Scrymser Company
Buckeye Pipeline Company
Chesebrough Manufacturing Company, Consolidated - later Chesebrough-Ponds
Colonial Oil Company
Continental Oil Company - later Conoco
Crescent Pipe Line Company
Cumberland Pipe Line Company, Inc.
Eureka Pipe Line Company
Galena-Signal Oil Company
Indiana Pipe Line Company
National Transit Company
New York Transit Company
Northern Pipe Line Company
Ohio Oil Company - later Marathon
Prairie Oil and Gas Company
Solar Refining Company
Southern Pipe Line Company
South Penn Oil Company
South-West Pennsylvania Pipe Lines
Standard Oil Company (California) -- later Chevron
Standard Oil Company (Indiana) - later Amoco
Standard Oil Company (Kansas)
Standard Oil Company (Kentucky)
Standard Oil Company (Nebraska)
Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) - later Esso and then Exxon
Standard Oil Company of New York -- Socony, then Socony-Vacuum, later Mobil
Standard Oil Company (Ohio) - later Sohio and the merged with BP
Swan & Finch Company
Union Tank Line Company
Vacuum Oil Company - later merged to form Socony-Vacuum, later Mobil
Washington Oil Company
Waters-Pierce Oil Company
[List and genealogy derived from George Sweet Gibb and Evelyn H. Knowlton, History of Standard Oil (New Jersey): The Resurgent Years, 1911-1927 (1956), Table 1: Companies Disaffiliated from Jersey Standard in 1911; Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power (1991); and Ron Chernow, Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. (1998)]
A Guide to the ExxonMobil Historical Collection, 1790-2004
What can you tell me about the Rockefeller family home Kykuit? Where can I find information about tours?
Historic Hudson Valley the non-profit educational organization commissioned by John D. Rockefeller Jr. to preserve historic sites in the Hudson Valley, runs Kykuit. Their website offers vast information about Kykuit and other historic sites, and information about tours.
What happened to the family home Rockwood Hall?
Rockwood Hall was the home of William Rockefeller (1841-1922), brother of John D. Rockefeller and a co-founder of the Standard Oil Company.
In 1886, William Rockefeller bought the 200-acre estate and castle, Rockwood, from the heirs of William Henry Aspinwall. Aspinwall was a wealthy New York City resident with interests
in merchant banking, a New York-California steamship company and railroads.
William Rockefeller intended Rockwood Hall, as he called the property, to be his summer home. He increased the size of the estate to more than 1,000 acres and
initiated an extensive building program. Rockefeller imported stone masons from Scotland, master wood carvers from Switzerland, gardeners from England, horticulturists from Japan
and employed the best American artists and craftsman. Accounts differ as to whether he demolished Edwin Bartlett's original castle and then built another on the same site, or if
he undertook extensive renovations to Bartlett's structure. In any event, at least one observer at the time labeled it "the most magnificent residence on the Hudson."
Among the structures built were a three-story coach stable, a farm barn,
a hennery, 17 greenhouses and a steel bridge spanning the New York Central Railroad tracks from the estate to a two-story boat house on the Hudson River. A siding was
added to the New York Central tracks, where Rockefeller kept his private railroad car.
William Rockefeller lived at Rockwood Hall until his death on June 24, 1922, at the age of 81. His
heirs decided to sell the property and engaged a real estate agent, who produced a sales booklet,
"Rockwood Hall: the Country Estate of the Late William Rockefeller." When an individual buyer could not be found, a group of individuals formed
Rockwood Hall, Inc., purchased the estate, and converted it into an exclusive country club.
They added an 18-hole golf course, swimming pool and other recreational facilities. Their venture
was unsuccessful, however, and in 1936 Rockwood Hall, Inc. declared bankruptcy.
On December 10, 1937, the bankruptcy court, by referee's deed, sold the land and buildings owned
by Rockwood Hall, Inc. to John D. Rockefeller, Jr. He then leased the mansion and grounds to
the newly-chartered Washington Irving Country Club, which was also short-lived. In the late
1930s the coach house and stable were remodeled and some summer theater productions were held,
but these ceased after 1939.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. had no real use for Rockwood Hall and, in late 1941 and early 1942, had the buildings razed. On April 8, 1946 he deeded the Rockwood Hall property to his son, Laurance S. Rockefeller. In 1970 he sold 80 acres to the International Business Machine Corporation (IBM) for its world trade center. Beginning in the early 1970s, Laurance Rockefeller leased the property to the State of New York as a public park for one dollar a year, and underwrote the maintenance costs. In 1999 he donated the property to the State of New York as part of Rockefeller State Preserve.
In 2003, visible remnants of the estate buildings included the foundations of the main house and one gate house along Route 9.
What has become of other Rockefeller properties?
Forest Hill is a unique community spanning Cleveland Heights and East Cleveland, Ohio, on property that was John D. Rockefeller, Jr.'s boyhood home.
Euclid Golf Allotment is a housing development on land once owned by John D. Rockefeller.
What papers do you hold relating to the Attica prison riot in 1971?
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