Margaret Chanler Aldrich

Margaret Livingston Aldrich, also known as Angel of Puerto Rico ( Chanler; October 31, 1870 – March 19, 1963), was an American philanthropist, poet, nurse, and woman's suffrage advocate and prominent member of the Astor family. She was primarily known to be the owner of Rokeby in Barrytown, New York which she purchased from her siblings. Aldrich was a daughter of John Winthrop Chanler and wife of Richard Aldrich.

Life
Aldrich was born Margaret Livingston Chanler on October 31, 1870 in Manhattan to John Winthrop Chanler, prominent attorney and U.S. Representative from New York, and Margaret Astor Chanler (née Ward), who was an Astor heiress. Her maternal grandparents were Samuel Cutler Ward and Emily Astor, a daughter of William Backhouse Astor.

She served as a nurse with the American Red Cross during the Spanish–American War and Philippine–American War, travelling to the Philippines, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, where she organized the care and treatment of wounded soldiers, for which she received a gold medal from Congress. She helped pass a 1901 bill establishing the Women's Army Nursing Corps and later served as an advocate for rural nursing, encouraging community members to support nurses.

Personal life
Later in life wrote of the family in her memoirs, Family Vista (1958). A proponent of women's suffrage, she was a past president of the Protestant Episcopal Woman's Suffrage Association. In 1906, Chanler married Richard Aldrich, with whom she had two children.


 * Richard Chanler Aldridge (May 16, 1909 - November 5, 1961)
 * Margaret "Maddie" Aldrich (November 11, 1910 - April 25, 2011), married Byron A. DeMott of Santa Barbara, California.

Margaret Aldrich purchased from her siblings the family estate Rokeby in Barrytown, New York, where she started a dairy farm. As of 2019, the property remains with her descendants.