The DeLamater Mansion still stands today on the Eatons Neck peninsula, and was rented in 1942 by French author Antoine de Saint Exupéry who wrote The Little Prince while at the mansion.
Cornelius Vanderbilt | Cornelius | Pope Cornelius | Lucius Cornelius Cinna | Cornelius Cardew | Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney | Cornelius Lanczos | Peter von Cornelius | Cornelius Grogan | Cornelius Ryan | Cornelius Castoriadis | Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum | Jerry Cornelius | Helen Cornelius | Cornelius Vermuyden | Cornelius, North Carolina | Cornelius (musician) | Cornelius Ludewich Bartels | Cornelius Jansen | Cornelius Bundrage | Joseph Cornelius O'Rourke | Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa | Cornelius Vander Starr | Cornelius Vanderbilt III | Cornelius Vanderbilt II | Cornelius P. Rhoads | Cornelius Nepos | Cornelius Lysaght | Cornelius Griffin | Cornelius Cole |
Its architect is unknown, but it shows the influence of James Renwick, who in the years before had pioneered the mansard-roofed buildings that evolved into the Second Empire style with the original Corcoran Gallery in Washington and, closer to Hudson, Main Building at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie.
Hanford was the eldest son of Seattle pioneers Edward and Abby Hanford and the older brother of Cornelius H. Hanford.