Dr. Rodman Drake de Kay Gilder
1877–1953
Psychiatrist, Heir to a Cultural Dynasty, and Guardian of a Legacy

Son of Richard Watson and Helena de Kay Gilder; a New York psychiatrist who bridged the Gilder and Tiffany families.
Born into one of the most artistically and intellectually influential families of the Gilded Age, Dr. Rodman Drake de Kay Gilder was the son of Richard Watson Gilder, the poet-editor of The Century Magazine, and Helena de Kay Gilder, painter and co-founder of the Art Students League of New York. Raised in the heart of New York's cultural elite — and nurtured at Four Brooks Farm in Tyringham, Massachusetts — Rodman inherited a legacy of art, literature, and public service.
Educated in medicine, Rodman became a psychiatrist, balancing the rigors of science with the introspective sensitivity that defined his family. He practiced in New York City, where he was a quiet but respected figure in his field. Though less publicly visible than his parents, Rodman maintained the Gilder commitment to civic duty, progressive thought, and intellectual refinement.
Rodman was the brother of Rosamond Gilder, the theater critic and arts administrator who would carry the Gilder name into the modern era. As the father of Richard Watson Gilder II, a pilot killed in World War II, and father-in-law to Louis Comfort Tiffany's daughter, Rodman's life intersected with many threads of American art, science, and sacrifice.