Houghton was born in Corning, New York on December 12, 1906. He was the son of Mahitbel "Mabel" Houghton and Arthur Amory Houghton Sr., a former president of Corning Glass. His parents lived in Corning and in New York City at 920 and 941 Park Avenue. He had two older sisters, Phoebe Hollister Houghton, who died young, and Gratia Buell Houghton, who married writer and playwright Alan Rinehart. His paternal grandparents were Amory Houghton Jr., a former president of Corning, and Ellen Ann Houghton. Arthur was nephew of Alanson Bigelow Houghton and a great-grandson of Amory Houghton Sr., a founder of Corning Glass Works in 1851. Among the many prominent family members of his generation were the U.S. Ambassador to France, Amory Houghton, and Alice Tully, who donated the funds for a chamber music hall at Lincoln Center named in her honor. Like his father before him, Houghton attended St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire in 1925, and graduated from Harvard University in 1929.
Career
After his graduation from Harvard, Houghton joined the family business. In 1933, he began his forty year service as president of Steuben Glass Works, a subsidiary of the Corning Company, where he is credited for a change of artistic direction toward more modern forms, which incorporated Art Deco and modernist themes. He hired renowned sculptors including Sidney Waugh, Massimo Vignelli. In 1940, while remaining in his role as president of Steuben but relinquishing day-to-day operations, he began to serve as the curator of rare books at the Library of Congress, in Washington, D.C., under Archibald MacLeish, the Librarian of Congress. Houghton served in this role for two years until the outbreak of World War II, where he served as an officer in the Army Air Corps for three years, retiring in 1945 as a Lieutenant colonel. He also served as a director of the USX Corporation and the New York Life Insurance Company as well as an honorary trustee of The United States Trust Company. In 1951, along with his cousin Amory Houghton, he co-founded the Corning Museum of Glass.
On June 12, 1929, Houghton married Jane Olmsted at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Harrisburg. Jane was the daughter of Gertrude McCormick and Marlin Edgar Olmsted, a Republican member of the U.S. Congress from Pennsylvania. Before their divorce in July 1938, they were the parents of:
Jane Olmsted Houghton, who married Rollin Van Nostrand Hadley Jr. in 1950. She later married Robert Gordon Hankey, Horace E. Henderson, and George R. Kneeland.
Sylvia Houghton, who married Richard Gordon Garrett in 1963.
His first wife remarried to Hugh McMillan in 1947. On June 7, 1939, he was married for the second time to Ellen Crenshaw in Queenstown, Maryland. Ellen was a friend of Washington journalist Joseph Alsop. Before their divorce in January 1944, they were the parents of one child:
Arthur Amory Houghton III, who married Sherrill Jean Mulliken in 1968. He later married Linda Livingston Davis, daughter of Goodhue Livingston Jr., in 1987. Arthur was the assistant curator in antiquities at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
On January 15, 1944, he married for the third time to Elizabeth Douglas McCall and before their divorce in 1972, were the parents of one child:
Hollister Douglas "Holly" Houghton, who married equestrian William D. Haggard III in 1968.