Things You Should Know About Theodore Roosevelt's Children
The President of the United States is the most dominant and powerful position in the world.
The one who occupies this position mustn't be an ordinary person. He is a work of marvel, has a dynamic personality, and is the most influential person.
One such dynamic personality that happened to embrace the post of presidentship of the United States was Theodore Roosevelt. He was born to Theodore Roosevelt Sr. and Martha Bulloch.
Theodore Roosevelt was known for his progressive policies, yet he was equally popular because of his family members. The Roosevelt clan lived in the White House, and ever since they left, the white house has never seen a family quite like them.
The family home of President Roosevelt was in Oyster Bay, New York. His first wife, Alice Hathaway Lee, only had one daughter, while the rest of the kids were born from his second wife, Edith Kermit Carow.
Read on to know more about President Roosevelt and his children. Afterward, also check facts on Teddy Roosevelt children and moon child meaning.
Theodore Roosevelt Children's Names
Theodore Roosevelt was popularly also called 'Teddy Roosevelt' or, by his initials, ' T.R.' He was the 26th president of the United States.
From 1901 to 1909, he served as the President of the United States. When the then President of the U.S., President William McKinley, was murdered in 1901, Roosevelt was the vice president.
When McKinley died, Roosevelt became President due to the statutes of a succession of the United States. Before this, he served as the 33rd Governor of New York from 1899 to 1900. He also served as the Assistant Secretary of the Navy from 1897 to 1898.
Theodore Roosevelt continues to be the youngest person in history to be elected as President of the United States.
Roosevelt had six children. All of them were popular and increasingly talked about. Theodore Roosevelt's first wife was Alice Hathaway, whom he had married in October 1880. She died two years after the birth of their daughter Alice Lee Roosevelt in 1884.
Roosevelt's mother had died only a few days before, and he was heartbroken. In 1886, Roosevelt married Edith Kermit Crow. She was both a childhood friend and a close family friend to him. In addition to raising Alice, they had five children together.
The Roosevelt family's exploits enthralled the public; the President recognized that his family was a political asset and made it available to the press to some extent.
Thus, Roosevelt had a daughter, Alice, from his first marriage. He then married Edith Kermit Carow in 1886. Theodore, Kermit, Ethel, Archibald, and Quentin were his other five children with Edith.
T.R.'s family was like his own private carnival to him. His kids were all over the place, having excellent control of the premises of the White House.
Theodore Roosevelt's Children Education
Alice Roosevelt: She was born in New York City on February 12, 1884. She was a well-known socialite and writer in the United States. She was Theodore Roosevelt's eldest daughter and the only child he had with his first wife, Alice Hathaway Lee.
When Theodore Roosevelt assumed the presidency, she immediately rose to prominence and became a celebrity and fashion icon. We do not have enough data or information about her education. It is believed that she was uneducated but wrote famous books presenting herself as a liberated and free-spirited woman.
Quentin Roosevelt: Quentin Roosevelt was Roosevelt's youngest son. He was born in Washington, D.C., on November 19, 1897. The outgoing, mischievous youngster converted the White House into his personal playpen.
He grew up to become a man of wits and intellect. Quentin began his education at Force Elementary School in Alexandria, Virginia, and attended Episcopal High School afterward. Quentin routinely received outstanding grades and showed his father's intellectual prowess. In 1915, he was accepted to Harvard University.
Quentin, like his father, was a promising writer by the time he was a sophomore at Harvard. Harvard University, Class of 1919, awarded Quentin an A.B. (War Degree) posthumously.
Archie Roosevelt: Archibald 'Archie' Roosevelt was born in Washington, D.C., on April 10, 1894. While the other Roosevelt children were boisterous and rowdy, Archie was quiet and focused on his studies.
In particular, he enjoyed reading, which contributed to his overall happiness and success. Archie began his education at the Force School and afterward at Sidwell Friends School.
After being dismissed from Groton, Archie attended the Evans School for Boys and went to Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1913. He went to Harvard University, where he received his bachelor's degree in 1917.
Kermit Roosevelt: Kermit Roosevelt was born in Oyster Bay, New York, on October 10, 1889, and led a full but tragic life. He worked hard in school as a child, but his health was terrible. On the other hand, Kermit heeded his father's advice to make the most of life.
As a young man, Kermit attended Groton School. He graduated from Harvard University with a bachelor's degree in 1937, a year ahead of his classmates. After graduating from Harvard, Roosevelt taught history at Caltech.
Theodore Roosevelt Junior: Teddy Roosevelt's four sons had illustrious military careers. But it was his son Theodore 'Ted' Roosevelt, Jr., born on September 13, 1887, in Oyster Bay, New York, who was the only one to be represented in a film.
Ted had an affinity for history, and reading during leisure was his favorite pastime. Ted Roosevelt attended The Albany Academy and later Groton School. He considered attending military school before enrolling in college.
Despite his lack of natural aptitude for academics, he persevered and graduated from Harvard College in 1909, when he joined the Porcellian Club, just like his father. Ted went into business after graduating from college.
Ethel Roosevelt: On August 13, 1891, Ethel Roosevelt was born in Oyster Bay, New York. She was Teddy Roosevelt's youngest daughter and the only girl with his second wife, Edith Roosevelt.
In 1901, when Theodore Roosevelt took the post and oath of presidentship, Ethel was only ten years old, and she joined her four brothers in their rambunctious White House shenanigans.
Her personality, on the whole, was quiet and kind. Ethel graduated from the Cathedral School for Girls in Washington in 1906 and made her White House debut two years later.
Theodore Roosevelt Children's Biography
Alice Roosevelt: She was the eldest daughter of Theodore Roosevelt and the only child of his first wife. When she and her father moved into the White House in 1901, Alice Roosevelt immediately established herself as a prominent figure in Washington, D.C. Society. Alice, however, was dissatisfied.
Edith, her father's second wife, and she were never friends. Alice grew estranged from her father, whom she saw to prefer his other children.
Alice developed a sense of self-assurance that complemented her independent, outspoken personality. She dressed flamboyantly, partied late at night, and was outspoken about her political views. Alice married Congressman Nicholas Longworth III in 1905, and he went on to become Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Despite this, she was not scared to take a political stand against her husband. Alice was a political nonconformist, even though she was a Republican.
She never followed a particular party line; she supported or opposed political issues and leaders based on her own sentiments. In 1980, she passed away. Alice Roosevelt remained her own woman until the end.
Quentin Roosevelt: The youngest son of Theodore was also his closest son. Quentin Roosevelt was a Harvard student when the United States entered World War.
Quentin and his brother followed their father's footsteps and willingly and passionately joined the military after their father pressed for American involvement in the war. Quentin dropped out of Harvard and joined the New York National Guard's 1st Aero Company.
The squadron trained at a local Long Island airstrip that was eventually dubbed Roosevelt Field in honor of Quentin Roosevelt. At the time of World War 1, he contributed as a pilot.
On July 14, 1918, he was killed in an aerial battle over France on Bastille Day. Observation planes that discovered targets for artillery were the principal enemy air threat during World War I. Roosevelt and the other American pilots were assigned the task of escorting observation planes over German lines.
The Americans had completed their task and were on their way back to the United States when they were attacked by at least seven German planes. Three German pilots claimed responsibility for Roosevelt's death.
Quentin Roosevelt's grave became a tourist attraction after the Germans departed and the Allies retook Chambery. Soldiers visited his tomb, had their photos taken there, and grabbed keepsakes from his Nieuport.
Quentin was his father's favorite. Six months after Quentin's death, Theodore Roosevelt died in his sleep of a heart attack.
Archie Roosevelt: Theodore and Edith Kermit Roosevelt had a third son, Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt. Archie obtained a job with the Bigelow Carpet Company after graduating from Harvard in June 1916.
During World War I, Archie was an Infantry Captain of the 26th Infantry Regiment, First Division. Archie was awarded multiple citations for gallantry, including France's Croix de Guerre, after being dismissed from the military with a 100 percent handicap.
Lieutenant Colonel Roosevelt led a battalion of the 162nd Infantry, 41st Division in New Guinea from 1943 to early 1944 during World War II. Archie was awarded the Silver Star with Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster as a decorated war hero for the second time.
Archie Roosevelt was the only American soldier to obtain a 100 percent handicap due to wounds he incurred in both world wars.
Archie utilized his substantial riches and influence during the Cold War to promote a wide range of conservative groups, most notably the John Birch Society. Grace perished in a fatal car accident in 1971.
Archie died on October 13, 1979, eight years later. At Young's Memorial Cemetery in Oyster Bay, New York, he is buried alongside other members of his family.
Kermit Roosevelt: Kermit Roosevelt (1889-1943) was the President's second son. Son Kermit inherited his father's humor, language mastery, and love of adventure and outdoor pursuits.
While his brothers enlisted in the American military during WWI, Kermit served in the British army. He drove Rolls-Royce armored automobiles in the sweltering desert of Mesopotamia (now Iraq).
He then became an artillery officer in the American army. His son Kermit rejoined the British army when World War II broke out, even though the United States remained neutral. He served valiantly in Norway in 1940.
Kermit was forced to quit the British Army in 1941 due to his health. Kermit Roosevelt was assigned to Alaska as an officer in the American Army and died there in 1943.
Theodore Roosevelt Jr.: Theodore (Ted) Roosevelt, Jr. (1887-1944) was Theodore and Edith Kermit Roosevelt's eldest son. Ted shared his famous father's love of hunting, exploration, and military service.
Ted began a commercial career after graduating from Harvard University in 1909.
Ted Roosevelt took the position of lieutenant colonel in the division first of infantry during World War I. Ted was severely wounded in action while attempting to lead his comrades in a fight.
Ed Roosevelt was the only one of the four Roosevelt brothers to enter politics, serving as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Governor of Puerto Rico, and Governor-General of the Philippines.
At the time of the Second World War, he was suffering from Arthritis and a weak heart.
He was given the division fourth of the infantry as a brigadier general. He and his troops landed on Utah Beach on June 6, 1944, and his gallantry won him a Medal of Honor.
On the other hand, Ted's heart was too feeble to keep going for long. He died on July 12 and was laid to rest alongside his brother Quentin in France. In the film The Longest Day, actor Henry Fonda played Teddy Roosevelt.
Ethel Roosevelt: Ethel Kermit Roosevelt was the daughter of Theodore and Edith Roosevelt. She was far more private than any of her siblings.
In 1913, at the age of twenty-two, Ethel married Harvard and Columbia-educated surgeon Richard "Dick" Derby. Their children, Richard, Sara Alden, Judith, and Edith, lived in Oyster Bay.
Ethel joined her husband in France when World War I broke out in 1914 and worked at the American Ambulance Hospital, tending to wound soldiers.
Ethel was exceptionally close to her parents, and even after Edith died in 1948, she remained at the heart of the family. Christ Episcopal Church and the Nassau County Nursing Service in Oyster Bay were among the organizations she devoted significant time and effort to.
She also helped turn her family's house at Sagamore Hill into a National Historic Site and became a trustee of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Before her death in 1977, she, like her brothers, traveled to far-flung corners of the globe.
Theodore Roosevelt's Children's Books
Well-read and filled with sharp intellects, children of Theodore Roosevelt utilize their talents in several books they have written.
Alice Roosevelt:
Crowded Hours: Autobiography of Alice Roosevelt
The Desk Drawer Anthology
Quentin Roosevelt:
Quentin Roosevelt: A Sketch with Letters
Eagles Rampant Rising: Two Lives of American Fighter
Archie Roosevelt:
For Lust of Knowing: Memoirs of an Intelligence Officer
Kermit Roosevelt:
The happy hunting grounds (1920)
Cleared for Strange Ports (1927)
The Long Trail (1921)
Theodore Roosevelt Junior:
East of the Sun and West of the Moon: Theodore Junior and Kermit Roosevelt's adventures while hunting in Central Asia are chronicled in this book.
Did you know that Theodore Roosevelt decided to move to North Dakota on his ranch named Elkhorn after his retirement?
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