[2] His paternal grandparents were Philip Jeremiah Schuyler (1768–1835), a U.S. Representative, and Sarah Rutsen.
[4] In 1881, Schuyler and his wife moved to Florida, joining prominent political, religious, and civil organizations on Amelia Island.
[6] He designed churches in Santa Fe, Fairbanks, and Waldo, many in the Carpenter Gothic style.
Carpenter Gothic architecture was developed by Richard Upjohn, whom Episcopal Bishop John Freeman Young of Florida had known while he was an assistant rector of Trinity Church in New York City.
In Santa Fe, Schuyler designed St. John's Chapel on land donated by E. B.