In 1903, Woodward met Elsie Ogden Cryder (1882–1981) at
Saratoga Springs, New York, They were married at
Grace Church in New York on October 24, 1904. Elsie's younger sister Edith was the wife of
Frederick Lothrop Ames Jr. and her aunt, the former Mary Hone Ogden, was the wife of
Charles Francis Adams Jr. (the grandson of president
John Quincy Adams). Together, they were the parents of one son and four daughters, including: who married Thomas Moore Bancroft in 1929. • Elizabeth Ogden Woodward (1907–1986), who married Robert
Livingston Stevens (1907–1972) in 1928. They divorced in 1935, and she married John Teele Pratt Jr., a son of
John Teele Pratt, in 1935. After his death in 1969, she married
Squaw Valley Ski Resort founder
Alexander Cochrane Cushing in 1971. • Sarah Woodward (1910–1991), who married Charles Arthur Moore III (1909–1989) in 1936. They divorced and she married Marshall Christopher Sewall (1908–1983) in 1949. • Ethel Woodward (b. 1914), who married Philippe de Croisset (1912–1965), a son of French playwright
Francis de Croisset, in 1941. His nephew was Count
Philippe de Montebello and his sister was
Marie-Laure, Vicomtesse de Noailles. After having two sons, Ethel and Philippe divorced and he married Jacqueline de la Chaume (after his death in 1965, Jacqueline became the third wife of actor
Yul Brynner). •
William Woodward Jr. (1920–1955), who married
Ann Crowell in 1943. In 1955 Ann shot and killed William, reportedly thinking him a burglar. She later committed suicide in 1975, after
Truman Capote published a story that "depicted her as a murderous vamp." In 1908, they lived at 11
West 51st Street in New York City and had a summer home in
Mount Kisco, New York. Around 1910, they purchased The Cloisters on
Ochre Point in
Newport, Rhode Island, the former estate of
Catherine Lorillard Kernochan, which had been designed by architect J.D. Johnston around 1885. The Woodwards hired New York architects
Delano & Aldrich to complete a major renovation, which was completed by 1914. The home was torn down in 1950 and the site was divided into smaller parcels for contemporary homes. The family also relocated from their 51st Street residence to 9
East 86th Street, which Woodward had purchased for $200,000 from William E. Iselin in 1916 and, again, hired architects Delano & Aldrich to design and build him a residence. Woodward died on September 25, 1953, aged 77, at his home in Manhattan. After a funeral at
St. James Episcopal Church in Manhattan, he was buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx. He left the estate to his son,
William Woodward Jr., whose untimely death two years later in 1955 saw the end of Belair Stud. His widow, considered "one of the last
grandes dames of New York society", died in her apartment at
The Waldorf Towers, where she had lived since 1956, in 1981. In 2016, Woodward was inducted into the
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame as a Pillar of the Turf. ==References==