His father's prominent business in New Orleans attracted the attention of Queen Isabella II of Spain and, with her, he formed a partnership and purchased the Havana Gas Works in Cuba.[8] While working with the Queen, his father brought one of his three sisters, Isabella, to Spain with him where she was presented at Court. She eventually married the Eduardo Fernández, Marquis de San Román,[9] a cousin of QueenIsabella II of Spain, in 1857, thereby becoming the Marchioness de San Roman.[2]Eugénie de Montijo, Empress consort of the French attended the wedding which was held at the Tuileries Palace in Paris.[8] Another sister, Charlotte Matilda Robb (1852–1902), married Dr. William Henry Pancoast (1834–1897), a surgeon in Philadelphia who was the son of Dr. Joseph Pancoast, and the other, Mary Robb (d. 1903), who married Joseph O. Miltenberger, a wealthy merchant from St. Louis,[2] and later, Col. Henry Mapleson (1851–1927), and Englishman who was the son of James Henry Mapleson.[10][11]
As someone interested in the preservation of the beauty of New York, he was appointed a New York City Parks Commissioner in 1887 by Mayor Abram Hewitt,[12] serving from May 1888 to December 1890; and was President of the Board of Park Commissioners from May 1888 to May 1889. At the time, a newspaper wrote of him:[1]
Only by eternal vigilance can the parks be maintained and developed as they ought to be, for there is never a time when some one is not trying to 'work' something to his own personal advantage and toe the detriment of the public. If he can't work it he makes a terrible hullaballoo and abuses the Commissioners. Mr. Robb has withstood all these jobs, big and little, and has endeavored to have the parks administered so that the people of New York can get the greatest possible enjoyment and benefit out of them.[1]
Nathaniel Thayer Robb (b. 1870),[19][20] who married Frances Beatrix Henderson (1875–1957),[21] daughter of Charles R. Henderson and Jennie North, in 1895.[18][22]
Harriet Bayard Robb (1881–1910), who died, unmarried,[25] aged 29 at her father's home.[26][27]
In 1892, he moved into a house built for him by Stanford White, at 23 Park Avenue. Afterwards, from 1924 to 1977, the house was the location of the Advertising Club. Robb also had a house at North East Harbor in Maine.[28]
Through his son Nathaniel, he was the grandfather of Janet Henderson Robb (b. 1896); James Hampden Robb (b. 1898); and Cornelia Van Rensselaer Robb (b. 1904),[15] who married Dr. Walther F. Goebel.[29]
Through his daughter Louisa, he was the grandfather of Goodhue Livingston, Jr. (1897–1994),[30] who married Joan Livingston Allen (1898–1964), the daughter of Frederick Hobbes Allen in 1919.[31] They divorced in 1931 and in 1932 he married Lorna Mackay (1911–1986). They divorced in the 1950s and he married Ruth Monsch Gordon. They also divorced and, in 1966, he married Dorothy Michelson-Stevens-Bitter-Dick (d. 1994), the widow of William Dixon Stevens and the daughter of Albert A. Michelson.[32] He was also the grandfather of Cornelia Thayer Livingston (1903–1975), who married Frederic Cromwell Jr. (1900–1973) in 1927.[33][34]
^Addison, Henry Robert; Oakes, Charles Henry; Lawson, William John; Sladen, Douglas Brooke Wheelton (1900). Who's Who. A. & C. Black. p. 687. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
^ abThayer, William Roscoe; Castle, William Richards; Howe, Mark Antony De Wolfe; Pier, Arthur Stanwood; Voto, Bernard Augustine De; Morrison, Theodore (1911). The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association. pp. 496–497. Retrieved 16 January 2018.