Maj. Gouverneur Cadwalader (February 3, 1880 â October 14, 1935) was an American sportsman and soldier.
Cadwalader was born on February 3, 1880, in Springfield Township, Pennsylvania. He was a son of Richard McCall Cadwalader (1839âÂÂ1918) and Christine W. ( Biddle) Cadwalader (1847âÂÂ1900). Among his brothers were Thomas Cadwalader, Dr. William Biddle Cadwalader, Richard McCall Cadwalader Jr. (who married Emily Margaretta Roebling), Charles Meigs Biddle Cadwalader, and Alexander Cadwalader,
His maternal grandparents were Jonathan Williams Biddle and Emily Skinner ( Meigs) Biddle. His paternal grandparents were Thomas McCall Cadwalader and Maria Charlotte ( Gouverneur) Cadwalader. His uncle, John Lambert Cadwalader, was a prominent lawyer who served as the 10th U.S. Assistant Secretary of State. He was also a great-grandson of Col. Lambert Cadwalader, an officer in the American Revolution who represented New Jersey at the Continental Congress.
Cadwalader graduated from St. Paul's School before attending the University of Pennsylvania.
After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, Cadwalader became associated with the engineering department of the Pennsylvania Railroad and was stationed in Western Pennsylvania. Later, he joined the Cresson-Morris Company, a firm of engineers, machinists and founders. When the War broke out, he was serving as secretary-treasurer of the company, but did not return to business after the war ended.
Following the beginning of World War I, Cadwalader and his brothers joined the service and was attached to the Watertown Arsenal (on the northern shore of the Charles River in Watertown, Massachusetts) as a Major in the Ordnance Corps.
In 1921, Cadwalader was married to Mae Drexel ( Fell) Henry (1884âÂÂ1948). The widow of Capt. Howard Houston Henry, Mae was a daughter of John Ruckman Fell and Sarah Rozet ( Drexel) Van Rensselaer. After Mae's father died, her mother Sarah (a daughter of banker Anthony Joseph Drexel) married Alexander Van Rensselaer. Together, they were the parents of:
He was a member of the First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry, the Pennsylvania Club, and belonged to the Racquet and Whitemarsh Valley Hunt Clubs. Cadwalader was interested in dogs and horses and served as president of the Kennel Club of Philadelphia.
Cadwalader died of heart disease at Hawkswell, his home at Camp Hill near Fort Washington (today part of Whitemarsh Township, Pennsylvania), on October 14, 1935. His widow died on August 31, 1948, at her summer home at Dark Harbor, Maine.