. In 1879, Harriman married
Mary Williamson Averell, daughter of William J. Averell, a banker in
Ogdensburg, New York. Together they had six children: •
Mary Harriman (1881–1934), who married
Charles Cary Rumsey (1879–1922), a sculptor, in 1910. • Henry Neilson Harriman (1883–1888), who died young. • Cornelia Harriman (1884–1966), • Carol Averell Harriman (1889–1948), who married Richard Penn Smith Jr. (1893–1929) in 1917. After his death, she married W. Plunket Stewart, who had previously been married and divorced from
Elsie Cassatt, the daughter of
Alexander Cassatt, in 1930. •
William Averell Harriman (1891-1986), the
Secretary of Commerce under
President Harry S. Truman, the
48th Governor of New York, the U.S. Ambassador to the
Soviet Union and U.S. Ambassador to Britain. He was married three times: First to Kitty Lanier Lawrance (from 1915 until their divorce in 1929), then
Marie Norton Whitney (from 1930 until her death in 1970), then lastly
Pamela Beryl Digby Churchill Hayward (from 1971 until his death in 1986) •
Edward Roland Noel Harriman (1895–1978), who married
Gladys Fries (1896–1983) in 1917. Harriman died on September 9, 1909, at his home,
Arden, at 1:30 p.m. at age 61. Naturalist
John Muir, who had joined him on the
1899 Alaska expedition, wrote in his eulogy of Harriman, "In almost every way, he was a man to admire."
Harriman estate In 1885, Harriman acquired "
Arden", the Parrott family estate in the
Ramapo Highlands near
Tuxedo, New York, for $52,500. The property had been a source of iron ore for the Parrott Brothers Iron Works. Over the next several years he purchased almost 40 nearby parcels of land, adding , and connected all of them with of bridle paths. His residence, Arden House, was completed just seven months before he died. In the early 1900s, his sons
W. Averell Harriman and
E. Roland Harriman hired landscape architect
Arthur P. Kroll to landscape many acres. In 1910, his widow donated to the state of New York for
Harriman State Park. The estate was designated a
National Historic Landmark in 1966. ==Legacy==