Parker Handy

During the 1840s, he came to New York City to be cashier of the Ocean Bank at Greene and Fulton Streets, retiring before it later failed.

After the Ocean Bank, he went "into the South American trade and carried on a prosperous business as senior member of the firm of Handy & Hoadley.

[1] In 1870, he succeeded Peter Hayden and established himself in the banking business, dealing primarily with bullion and specie, at 24 Nassau Street.

Ebenezer Fitch) and Douglas Wheeler Sloane, a Williams College graduate who served in the War of 1812 and lived on Euclid Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio.

[6] Together, Cornelia and Parker were the parents of:[6] He was an active Republican and was one of the founders of the Union League Club of New York and was a trustee of the Northern Dispensary as well as the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church.