The portraits of the sisters, above, courtesy of the Schuyler Mansion, Albany, NY. After Samuel's death in 1817, Caty married her cousin James Cochran, the son of John Cochran and Gertrude Schuyler Cochran, Philip Schuyler's sister (and who are all mentioned in I, ELIZA HAMILTON, too.) Both Caty and James lived into their late seventies. Her first husband, Samuel Bayard Malcolm, was from a prominent New York merchant family with Scottish roots, loyal supporters of Alexander Hamilton's Federalist party. (In I, ELIZA HAMILTON, Caty is the baby born soon after the army's winter encampment in New Jersey where Eliza and Alexander fall in love, and become engaged.)Ĭaty married twice. She often visited with her grown, married sisters Angelica and Eliza, whose own children were Caty's contemporaries. Twenty-five years younger, Catharine, or Caty, was truly the baby of the family, and a particular favorite of her aging father. Unfortunately both parents died young: Cornelia in 1808, and her husband in 1810.Ĭatharine Schuyler Malcom Cochrane (1781–1857), above right as a teenager, shared the same birthday (February 20) with her oldest sister Angelica, but more than a generation separated them in age. Regardless of this dramatic beginning, the Mortons were happily married, with five children. Tradition says Cornelia jumped into Washington's arms from her second-floor bedroom window, fleeing with nothing but the clothes on her back. Soon afterwards, the young couple eloped. Although Washington did ask Cornelia's father for her hand, he was denied, and curtly shown the door. Cornelia first met George Washington Morton, a young Princeton-educated lawyer from a prosperous NJ family, at the home of Eliza and Alexander in 1796. She's shown, above left, in her portrait by Thomas Sully.Īlso much like Angelica, Cornelia fell in love with a man that failed to impress Gen. Cornelia was considered beautiful and witty, much like her oldest sister Angelica. There were three surviving sons: John Bradstreet Schuyler (1765–1795), Philip Jeremiah Schuyler (1768–1835), and Rensselaer Schuyler (1773–1847) - so you can forget the theatrical Angelica's lament about how her father had no sons, too.īut there were also two more Schuyler sisters. Cornelia Schuyler Morton (1776–1808) was born on the eve of the American Revolution. Of these, seven died either at birth or before their first birthdays, including sets of twins and triplets. In reality, however, Catharine Van Rensselaer Schuyler gave birth to fifteen (!) children in the course of her long marriage to Philip Schuyler. Angelica Schuyler Church (1756–1814), Elizabeth, or Eliza, Schuyler Hamilton (1757–1854), and Margarita, or Peggy, Schuyler Van Rensselaer (1758–1801) are the three oldest of the Schuyler siblings, the three sisters who were probably closest, and, doubtless for the sake of dramatic clarity, the only three who are mentioned in the play. Philip and Catharine Schuyler is "Hamilton: An American Musical", then you'll be forgiven if you believe that there were only three Schuyler sisters. By the end of the musical, Angelica’s loyalty to Eliza makes her a narrator of sorts, helping her sister cope first with betrayal and then grief over her murdered son.If your first introduction to the children of Gen. When Hamilton cheats on Eliza, publicly humiliating her and ruining his own reputation, Angelica stands by her sister: “I love my sister more than anything in this life / I will choose her happiness over mine, every time” (“The Reynolds Pamphlet”). Her brilliance and ambition are best captured in the letters she exchanges with Hamilton, where she presses him to adopt certain political positions and flirts with him via debates over comma placement. After Hamilton and Eliza get married, Angelica becomes a confidante for them both. Angelica quickly falls in love with Hamilton, but she selflessly does not pursue him, instead setting him up with her sister Eliza (“Satisfied”) her rapid-fire singing in that piece reflects her incredibly quick thinking as a character. Though her father tries to separate her from the political hubbub of the day, Angelica knows that “history is happening in Manhattan”-and she is desperate to be a part of it (“The Schuyler Sisters”).
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