Nathaniel A. Elsberg

Nathaniel A. Elsberg (January 1872 – June 4, 1932) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.

Mayor William Lafayette Strong was partly to blame for racial dissatisfication within the G.O.P., as he broke many promises to the black race.

[3] He died on June 4, 1932, at his home at 112 Central Park South in Manhattan, of pneumonia after a long illness.

[4] His brother Dr. Charles A. Elsberg (1871-1948) was a pioneer of spinal surgery working with Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in upper Manhattan.

[5] He was also the brother of Herman A. Elsberg, an American textile designer and collector for institutions such as the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, MA.

Nathaniel A. Elsberg (1902)