Return to America and founding of Angelica, N.Y.
, eldest son of Angelica and John Barker Church John and Angelica Church returned to the United States in May 1797 for a visit, and returned permanently in 1799 to be reunited with the Schuyler family in New York. In May 1796, John Barker Church accepted a mortgage on of land in present-day
Allegany County and
Genesee County, New York, against a debt owed to him by his friend
Robert Morris. After Morris failed to pay the mortgage, the Churches' eldest son
Philip Schuyler Church acquired the land in a foreclosure sale in May 1800. To take possession of the land, Philip traveled in 1801 to the area, near the Pennsylvania border, with his surveyor
Moses Van Campen and four others. Philip Church selected specific acreage for a planned village along the
Genesee River, with plots and design to be reminiscent of
Paris. The plan included a circular road enclosing a village park at the center of town, streets radiating from the circular road to form a star, and five churches situated around the circle. Philip named the village
Angelica, after his mother. By 1803, the village was populated with log cabin homes, including Philip's, and he had erected a sawmill and a gristmill. Philip Church married Anna Matilda Stewart in Philadelphia on February 4, 1805. Soon after the wedding, the two settled permanently in the
village of Angelica, where a small whitewashed house (locally known as the "White House") had already been built for the couple on the banks of the Genesee River. In 1806, Angelica and John Barker Church began construction on a thirty-room mansion nearby, called
Belvidere, which still stands as a privately owned home on the banks of the Genesee in
Belmont, New York, near the town of
Angelica. Although they had intended to make it their summer home, it instead became the residence of Philip and Anna Church when it was partially completed in 1810. ==Correspondence and personal life==