Clarence Geist Ely


LAKEVILLE — Clarence Geist Ely, 76, of Miami, Fla., and Lakeville died at Noble Horizons on June 22, 2007.  For 21 years he was the companion of Margaret H. Douglas-Hamilton of Lakeville.

Mr. Ely, known as "Geist," was born in Philadelphia, Pa., on May 29, 1931, the son of Elizabeth (Geist) Ely and Van Horn Ely Jr. Five days later he was taken to his family’s summer home on Fishers Island, N.Y., where he was a member of the Fishers Island Club for 50 years.

Elizabeth Ely was the daughter of Clarence Henry Geist, considered the largest private owner of utilities in the United States in the early 1900s. That grandfather, for whom Mr. Ely was named, also built the Seaview Golf Club in Atlantic City, N.J., in 1914 and developed The Boca Raton Hotel and Club in Florida in 1928.  In addition, he built the controversial Geist Reservoir by purchasing about 5,000 acres in Fall Creek Valley, Pa., including the village of Germantown, which was submerged by the reservoir.

Mr. Ely attended the Haverford School in Philadelphia and graduated from St. Paul’s School, Concord, N.H., in 1949. He spent a post-graduate year at The Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville, N.J., before entering Princeton University, from which he graduated as a member of the class of 1954, although his actual graduation was delayed by a tour of active combat duty with the Army in Korea during the Korean Conflict.  

At the time of his death, Mr. Ely was a member of the Racquet & Tennis Club in New York City and of the Sharon Country Club in Sharon. During the 50 years he was a member of the Fishers Island Club, where he was a golf champion, he was chairman of the Golf Committee and on the Board of Trustees. 

He was also a distinguished ice hockey player who was captain of the team at St. Paul’s School and who played on the first string varsity team at Princeton, where he was a member of the Tiger Inn. After graduating from Princeton, he was chosen to play on the U.S. Olympic ice hockey team. With his uncle, Dick Chapman, the United States, British and French amateur golf champion of the 1930’s, Mr. Ely played on most of the finest golf courses in the United States, including The National at Augusta, Ga., and the Pine Valley Club in New Jersey, which he considered among the best.

He had a multifaceted career with his first job at the brokerage firm Janney, Montgomery, Scott. He was a founder of Ondine’s in 1964, the first discotheque in New York City.  While living for several years in St. Croix, V.I., he started an inter-island airline with his lifelong friend, Center Hitchcock, who pre-deceased him.  He retired from Dean Witter in the 1970s.

In addition to his longtime companion, Ms. Douglas-Hamilton, he is survived by four children, Van Horn Ely III of Girdwood, Alaska, Clarence Geist Ely Jr. of Aurora, Ohio, Melinda Ely Dubow of Manhattan, N.Y., and Center Marshall Ely of Aiken, N.C.; his niece, Elizabeth Gay Pollock and her four children of Salem, Va.; and five grandchildren. Three marriages ended in divorce. Mr. Ely was pre-deceased by his younger sister, Hope Ely Muzzarelli, who died young, leaving a daughter, whom Mr. Ely raised with his children.

It was his wish that there be only a private, family funeral in the Geist family mausoleum at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd, Pa.

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