Katana VentraIP

John Taylor Johnston

John Taylor Johnston (April 8, 1820 – March 24, 1893) was an American businessman and patron of the arts. He served as president of the Central Railroad of New Jersey and was one of the founders of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

John Taylor Johnston

Inaugural holder

(1820-04-08)April 8, 1820
New York

March 24, 1893(1893-03-24) (aged 72)
Manhattan, New York

Frances Colles
(m. 1851; died 1888)

John Johnston
Margaret Taylor Howard

Businessman, lawyer, philanthropist

Early life[edit]

Johnston was born on April 8, 1820, in New York City. He was the eldest child of John Johnston and Margaret (née Taylor) Howard Johnston, a widow of Rhesa Howard Jr. who was the nephew of William Few, Signer of the U.S. Constitution from Georgia whose brother-in-law was U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin.[1] His younger brother was James Boorman Johnston, who commissioned the Tenth Street Studio Building at 51 West 10th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. His sister, Margaret Taylor Johnston, was married to John Bard (a grandson of Dr. Samuel Bard) and together were founders of Bard College.[2]


Both of his parents were of Scottish ancestry,[3] and his father was a prominent businessman with Boorman, Johnston, & Co. and was a co-founder of Washington Square North. His mother had four siblings who, likewise, married two grandchildren, a great-granddaughter, and a nephew of founding father Roger Sherman, Signer of the U.S. Constitution and the U.S. Declaration of Independence from Connecticut.


Johnston grew up in Greenwich Village, where he was born, and was educated at Edinburgh High School in Edinburgh, Scotland. He graduated from the University of the City of New York, an institution founded by his father and several other civic-minded New Yorkers, in 1839. He later studied at Yale Law School, where his classmates included Charles Astor Bristed, Daniel D. Lord, and Henry G. DeForest.[3]

Emily Johnston (1851–1942), who married , a lawyer, financier, and philanthropist.[8]

Robert W. de Forest

Colles Johnston (1853–1886), who died unmarried.

John Herbert Johnston (1855–1931), who married Celestine Noel (1860–1940).[10]

[9]

Eva Johnston, who married Henry Eugene Coe.

[11]

Frances Johnston (1857–1928), who married Pierre Mali (1856–1923), the former Belgian Consul-General in New York.

Legacy[edit]

Johnston Avenue in lower Jersey City, New Jersey (designated County Route 614 for a 0.81-mile (1.30 km) section of its length) begins in the west at the foot of Bergen Hill close to Communipaw Junction and ends at the Liberty State Park Station of the Hudson Bergen Light Rail. The cobblestoned portion street continues under New Jersey Turnpike Newark Bay Extension, in Liberty State Park to the Communipaw Terminal on the Upper New York Bay and in the 1970s was rededicated Audrey Zapp Drive[15] to honor a local environmentalist influential in the development of the park.[16]


The Port Johnston Coal Docks on Constable Hook in Bayonne, New Jersey, also bear his name. The former Johnston Avenue Yard was the terminus for the Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway.


Johston Drive in Watchung,the borough just north of his Plainfield Home at 857-859 East Front Street, was named after Johnston.

at Find a Grave

John Taylor Johnston

at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Johnston collection of engraved gems

from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Archives, New York.

John Taylor Johnston Collection, 1832-1981