William Kissam Vanderbilt
Biography|subject_name=William Kissam Vanderbilt|image_name=William_KissamVanderbilt.jpg|image_caption=|date_of_birth=
December 12 1849|place_of_birth=|
dead=dead |
date_of_death=
July 22 1920|place_of_death=
Paris, France}}
William Kissam Vanderbilt (
December 12 1849 –
July 22 1920) was a member of the prominent
United States Vanderbilt family.
The second son of
William Henry Vanderbilt, from whom he inherited $60 million, he was for a time active in the management of the family railroads, though not much after 1903. His sons
William Kissam Vanderbilt II (1878-1944) and
Harold Stirling Vanderbilt (1884-1970) were the last to be active in the railroads, the latter losing a proxy battle for the
New York Central Railroad in the 1950s.
William K. Vanderbilt's first wife was
Alva Erskine Smith (1853-1933), who he married in 1875. Born in 1853 to a slave-owning
Alabama family, she was the mother of his children and was instrumental in forcing their daughter
Consuelo (1877-1964) to marry the 9th
Duke of Marlborough in 1895. Not long after this the Vanderbilts divorced, William K. later marrying Anne Harriman Rutherford Sands and Alva marrying
Oliver Hazard Perry Belmont.
After the death of his brother
Cornelius Vanderbilt II in 1899 he was generally regarded as head of the
Vanderbilt family.
Like other members of his wealthy family, he built magnificent
Vanderbilt houses. His homes included
Idle Hour (1900) on
Long Island,
New York and
Marble House (1892), designed by
Richard Morris Huntin
Newport.
William Kissam Vanderbilt died in
Paris, France in 1920. His remains were brought home and interred in the Vanderbilt family vault in the
Moravian Cemetery at
New Dorp on
Staten Island, New York.