Select Roosevelt Miscellany
- The Van Rosevelts
- Dutch New York Families
- The Oyster Bay and Hyde Park Roosevelts
- Isaac Roosevelt and His Sugar Business
- Teddy Roosevelt and the Spanish American War
- Eleanor Roosevelt's Life
The Van Rosevelts
The grants of land fiefdoms in the area of Tholen in SW Holland dated back to the early 15th century. The vassal lords who received these grants had the responsibility of building dykes on the land and in return held local powers.
One of the first of these amt lords was Marijinus van Rosevelt, whose lordship dated back to 1697. Johan Willem van Rosevelt was an amt lord from 1731 to 1790. These van Rosevelts held a place of prominence in the Oud-Vessermeer House of Amt Lords which was constructed in 1767, even among the other amt lords.
Evidence suggests that the immigrant Claes van Rosevelt did come from the Tholen region of Holland. However, there is nothing to tie him to the amt lords van Rosevelts. In fact there is no knowledge even of who his parents were.
FDR's daughter reported that her father, in all his study of family genealogy, had never been able to find out what Claes had done for a livelihood before coming to America. As a consequence, he said, he had come to the conclusion that his ancestor must have been a horse thief or sorne other kind of a thief and, therefore, a fugitive from justice. This conclusion, however, may have been designed to tease his aristocratic mother.
Dutch New York Families
A number of Dutch families who came to New York in the 1600's achieved a later prominence in American history. The table below lists these family names, their immigrant forebear and arrival date, and approximate numbers in America today.
| Name |
Forebear and Arrival Date |
Numbers Today (000's) |
| Vanderbilt |
Jan Aertszoon van der Bilt in
1650 |
5.4 |
| Roosevelt
|
Claes Maartenszen van Rosenvelt
in 1649 |
3.8 |
| Van Dyke |
Jan Thomasse van Dyke in 1652 |
2.4 |
| Schuyler |
Philip Pieterse Schuyler in 1650 |
1.4 |
| Van Buren |
Cornelis Maessen van Buren in
1631 |
1.0 |
Other notable early Dutch families, but with few descendants of their name in America today, are Rensselaer, Stuyvesant, van Courtlandt, van Wyck, Beekman, Hasbrouck (a Huguenot family), and Bloemendael (which probably became Bloomingdale).
The Oyster Bay and Hyde Park Roosevelts
The Oyster Bay Roosevelts
Johannes Roosevelt (1688-1750) married Heyltje Sjoerls in
1708
- Jacobus (James) Roosevelt (1724-1777) married Annetje Bogert in 1746
- Jacobus (James) Roosevelt (1759-1840) married Maria van Schaak
in 1793
- Cornelius van Schaak Roosevelt (1794-1871) married
Margaret Barnhill in 1821
- Theodore Roosevelt (1831-1878) married
Martha Bulloch in 1853
- Theodore (Teddy)
Roosevelt (1858-1919), President.
The Hyde Park
Roosevelts
Jacobus Roosevelt (1691-1776) married Catharina
Hardenbroek in 1712
- Isaac Roosevelt (1726-1794) married Cornelia Hoffman in 1752
- Jacobus (James) Roosevelt (1760-1847) married Maria Walton in
1786
- Isaac Roosevelt (1790-1863) married Mary
Aspinwall in 1827
- James Roosevelt (1828-1900)
married (second wife) Sarah Delano in 1880
- Franklin D.
Roosevelt (1882-1946), President.
The two Roosevelt presidents were the same number of
generations removed from their cornrnon ancestor. Their fathers were
contemporaries. But Teddy was a child of his father's youth and
F.D.R. of his father's fifty fifth year.
Isaac Roosevelt
and His Sugar Business
Isaac Roosevelt built the old sugar house in New York,
the first erected before the Revolution, and worked there before
the war and for ten years after. His store was originally on Wall
Street and his home faced on Queen Street (now Pearl) in Franklin
Square. On the rear of his house and in the center of the block
was the old sugar house. He moved to St. George's Square in 1772,
advertising his move as follows:
Isaac Roosevelt was one of the most active patriots
during the period of the Revolutionary War and served as state senator
from 1786 to 1790.
Teddy Roosevelt and the Spanish American War
T.R. got the position of Assistant Secretary of the Navy in 1897, a post from which he was able to observe with gusto the coming of war with Spain.
He had always wanted to lead his countrymen in battle and rhe ecruited his band of "Rough Riders." The nation had never before and would never again see the likes of the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry. Lt. Colonel Roosevelt found his troopers in the Ivy League, the Somerset and Knickerbocker clubs, the New York police force, the Texas Rangers. There were polo players, Indians and Indian fighters, broncobusters and steeplechase riders.
Teddy's capture of San Juan Hill during the ensuing war was hardly more than a skirmish. His cavalry had left its horses at home and scrambled up the slope on foot. Later, when Edith saw the site of her husband heroics, she was amused to find that it was hardly as steep as he had led her to believe.
Still for T.R, it was "the time of my life." Less than three months later he was back at home, a national hero, and the Republican candidate for governor of New York. As the Roosevelt campaign train steamed through the state a bugler would appear at each stop to play the cavalry charge. The candidate then emerged, surrounded by his faithful Rough Riders:
Poor Mr. Van Wyck, the Democratic candidate, never had a chance.
Eleanor Roosevelt's Life
She seemed to pick up momentum as more and more she became a public person, throwing her phenomenal energy and moral earnestness into issues, problems, policy. After her husband's death she applied herself to the Democratic reform movement in New York. And She continued her daily column, appearing in 75 newspapers, and her monthly magazine articles. Then there were books to be written, lectures to deliver, people to see, mail to answer, charities to be supported. So many things to do, so little time, as she spread her deep sympathies over mankind.
President Truman appointed her to the American delegation to the United Nations, which was a natural canvas for her broad-gauge humanitarianism. Diplomats discovered that she was no figurehead; the Soviets that she was no pushover. These were her shining years, just as the UN Declaration of Human Rights was her lasting monument.
A young girl once paid a visit to Sagamore Hill, and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, her aunt Edith, wrote:
As if recalling this prediction, Adlai Stevenson rose to pay tribute to the memory of Eleanor Roosevelt at the 1964 Democratic Convention:
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