His daughter, Susan Boudinot, married William Bradford, the Attorney General in President Washington's second cabinet.
[15] Gabriel's ancestry is traced to Edward I of England, and his wife, Margaret, daughter of Philip III, of France.
[16][17] In 1873, Bend was elected to a four-year term on the Governing Committee of the New York Stock Exchange along with Edward King, John R. Garland, Alfred Colvill, Edward Brandon, G. H. Watson, George W. McLean, Jacob Hays II, Donald Mackay, and John T.
After Bends apology to Schepp, several members of the Stock Exchange continued to seek to bring the issue before the Board of Governors.
[24] He had lived in the house for almost 10 years at that point, and had accumulated a sizable collection of rare books, paintings, and jewelry, valued at over $40,000.
The mansion, which cost over $60,000 to build, which had brick walls and stone trimmings, stood on a bluff overlooking the Hudson River, was surrounded by eight to ten acres of manicured grounds.
"[28][29] Bend, his wife, and daughters were all prominent members of New York Society during the Gilded Age, attending the most important dinners,[30] balls,[31] dances,[32] cotillions,[33][34][35] and donated to many charitable causes.
[36][37][38] They traveled around the fashionable parts of the Northeast, staying in Newport, Lenox, the Hudson Valley, and the Catskills.
[54] His only grandchild was Beatrice Bishop (1902–1993),[55] an author and prominent physician who married Adolf A. Berle, Jr. (1895–1971), a diplomat.