William Bradley Isham


William Bradley Isham was an American merchant and banker.

Early life

Isham was born in Malden-on-Hudson in Ulster County, New York on April 29, 1827. He was the son of Charles Isham, who was born in Colchester, Connecticut, and Flora Isham, who was born in Hartford, Connecticut. Among his siblings was sister Flora Eliza Isham and brother Samuel Isham.
His paternal grandparents were Mary Isham and Samuel Isham, a son of John Isham II. His maternal grandparents were Polly Bradley and Judge William Bradley of Hartford, Connecticut. Through his father, he was a distant cousin of Pierpoint Isham, a Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court, and his son, Edward Swift Isham, a lawyer and member of the Illinois House of Representatives.

Career

Along with his brother, Charles, Isham was a leather merchant. They began their business in Malden and, in 1849, he moved to New York City where Isham formed a partnership with George Palen and Isaac H. Bailey. He later owned downtown factories and warehouses on Gold and Cliff Streets.
He later became vice-president of the Union Bank and of the Bank of the Metropolis, and was president of the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company. Isham retired in 1890 and sent "the only Manhattan-grown wheat to the Columbia Exposition and to the Chicago World's Fair in 1893."
Isham was a benefactor of the Mount Washington Presbyterian Church and served as a trustee of the Dyckman Library. He was a patron of the American Museum of Natural History, a member of the Down Town Association, the New-York Historical Society, the Chicago Historical Society, the Metropolitan Club, the Riding Club, the Jekyll Island Club, the National Academy of Design, the New England Club, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the New York Botanical Garden.

Real estate

In 1862, he rented the former house and estate of the late Dr. Floyd T. Ferris, in uptown Manhattan, as a summer residence. The two-story house, located in the neighborhood now known as Inwood, had been built in the 1850s and was part of the Dyckman tract. Isham purchased the estate two years later in 1864. The house was situated at the highest point on the property and afforded the Ishams expansive views of the Hudson and Harlem Rivers and the Spuyten Duyvil Creek.
After his death, his daughter Julia Isham Taylor donated of the estate in 1911 to the City of New York for the creation of Isham Park, named in his honor. Isham's sister, Flora, followed suit and donated more in March 1912. After his son Samuel's death in 1914, the City was bequeathed an additional 24 lots. In October and December 1917, his daughter Julia bought and donated more adjoining land to the City for the park which eventually was restored to the approximate boundaries of the Isham estate, with extra land forming the new Inwood Hill Park.

Personal life

On June 9, 1852, Isham was married to Julia Burhans, the daughter of Rebecca Burhans and Col. Benjamin Peck Burnhans of Warrensburg, New York. Together, William and Julia were the parents of:
Isham died at the age of 81, at his home at 5 East 61st Street in Manhattan, on March 23, 1909.

Descendants

Through his son Charles, he was the grandfather of Abraham Lincoln "Linc" Isham, who married Leahalma Correa, the daughter of Spaniard, Carlos Correa and Englishwoman, Mary Gooding, in August 1919. They did not have any children together and Linc was among the last living direct descendants of President Lincoln.
Through his daughter Flora, he was the grandfather of William Bradley Isham Collins, Julia Helena Collins, and Minturn Post Collins Jr., also a real estate investor.