Beeckman was married first to Eleanor Thomas of
Zanesville, Ohio, in 1902. She was the daughter of Gen.
Samuel Russell Thomas and Ann Augusta (née Porter) Thomas and the sister of
Edward Russell Thomas. After his first wife's death in 1920, he remarried Edna (née Marston) Burke at
Bar Harbor, Maine, in September 1923. Edna, who was divorced from Oscar Meech Burke, was the daughter of Edwin Sprague Marston, the former president and chairman of the board of directors of the
Farmers' Loan & Trust Company (predecessor firm of
Citigroup), and Emma Bennett (née Doty) Marston. He had no children. In 1911, while staying at the
Ritz Hotel in Paris during a tour of France, "a drunken man" lurched in front of Beeckman and his wife's automobile. "The drunken man in the roadway was killed on the spot," Beeckman broke his arm and cut his head, and despite being thrown ten feet from the car, his wife was not injured. In 1912, it was reported that "R. Livingston Beeckman, who has survived more railroad, polo, and yachting accidents than any other member of Newport society," was in a railroad accident in
Sulphur Springs which he escaped without serious injury. He died on January 21, 1935, at his winter home in
Santa Barbara, California, of a heart attack. After his death, his widow remarried to Archibald Gourley Thacher in 1937.
Residences In 1903, Beeckman purchased the former home of Wallace C. Andrews at 854
Fifth Avenue between
66th and
67th Streets for $325,000. He hired architects
Warren & Wetmore to build him a six-story
Beaux-Arts residence which was completed in 1905. They owned the home until 1912 when they decided to live full-time in Rhode Island and, after leasing it to Pittsburgh banker
Benjamin Thaw Sr. for a number of years, the home was sold to George Grant Mason for $700,000. The Beeckman's also owned a winter home in
Providence, Rhode Island, which was damaged by a fire in January 1912. Their Newport estate, known as Lands End, was also damaged by a fire in September 1912. From 1913 to 1921, Beeckman leased
13 Brown Street, the Providence winter home of industrialist and Republican party supporter
Alfred M. Coats, which served as the Rhode Island executive mansion while Beeckman was in office as governor. He later became a winter resident of
Santa Barbara, California, where he rented the home of Arthur Meeker, although he was renting the Edward Ryerson house at the time of his death. ==References==