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  Roosevelt Derby, Ethel Carow
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationRepublican  
 
NameEthel Carow Roosevelt Derby
Address
Oyster Bay, New York , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born August 13, 1891
DiedDecember 10, 1977 (86 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedThomas Walker
Jan 22, 2008 02:10pm
Tags
InfoEthel Carow Roosevelt Derby (August 13, 1891 – December 10, 1977) was the youngest daughter and fourth child of the President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt. Known as The Queen of Oyster Bay and The First Lady of Oyster Bay by its Long Island residents, Ethel was instrumental in preserving both the legacy of her father as well as the family home, "Sagamore Hill" for future generations, especially after the death of her mother Edith in 1948.

Ethel Carow Roosevelt was born in Oyster Bay, New York to Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Kermit Carow. From an early age, young Ethel Carow showed practical leadership qualities. Her father once remarked: "she had a way of doing everything and managing everybody." She quickly made her place in the family, causing upsets in her numerous fights with the sensitive Kermit. Her sensitivity also showed. When she was four, her father was reprimanding Kermit by shaking his shoulder; Ethel, with tears in her eyes said, "Shake Me father."

She was thought to have resembled somewhat her older first-cousin, Eleanor Roosevelt. They each had soft, blue eyes, golden-blond hair but Ethel lacked Eleanor's height and had a heavier build in her waistline than did Eleanor.

At Sagamore Hill, Ethel aggressively took part in all the games, and especially enjoyed horseback riding with her mother. Like her mother, she enjoyed needlework, and easily managed the younger children.

In the White House, Ethel often filled in for her mother by placing meal orders and delegating tasks to the staff. She was only 10 years old when her father became President after William McKinley's assassination in 1901.

During her family's years in the White House, Ethel always tried to keep as low a profile possible because she did not seem to enjoy the attention as much as her half-sister Alice Roosevelt did. She was also encouraged to maintain her low-key persona by her mother Edith, who believed that women only made the news to announce her birth, marriage and her death. Ethel attended school at the National Cathedral and had difficulty making friends due to her father's position. Just months before the Roosevelt's departure from the White House, Ethel had her Debut and Coming Out Party in the White House on December 28, 1908. Ethel was just 17 at the time of her debut, one year shy of the typical age of 18 that most women "came out." The reason for this being the fact that the family was due to leave the White House less than three months following Ethel's debut. This would be last opportunity to do so if Ethel was to "come out" from Pennsylvania Avenue.

Ethel's indomitable spirit in the face of tragedy has been chronicled, along with a number of triumphs.

During World War I, Ethel, now a nurse served in France in the same hospital as her husband served as a surgeon. Later, she became involved with the Red Cross, and served as Nassau County Chairman during World War II, and then as Chairman of the Nassau County Nursing Service. Her long involvement, even while traveling, is shown by her correspondence still residing in the Nassau County Red Cross archives. When the Red Cross recently brought her Fifty Year Service Pin to Sagamore Hill, they had to correct themselves - it was not fifty years of service, it was sixty. When it came time to have her portrait painted, she did not choose to wear an evening gown and jewels, she wore her Red Cross uniform.

She put in many years of work to turn Sagamore Hill into a National Historic Site.

Ethel was one of the first two women to serve on the Board of Trustees of the American Museum of Natural History.

On April 4, 1913, she married Richard Derby, a surgeon. Mrs. Derby helped his efforts in France during World War I where she served as a nurse in the American Ambulance Hospital. Ethel was the first of T.R.'s children to serve in this "war to end all wars".

Ethel's marriage produced four children:

Richard Jr. (1914-1922) who died at age eight of septicemia
Edith Roosevelt (born 1917) who married Andrew M. "Mike" Williams and resides on Vashon Island, Washington.
Sarah Alden (1920-1999), who married Vermont State Senator Robert T. Gannett.
Judith Quentin Derby (1923-1973) who married Adelbert "Del" Ames III.
All of the children were raised in Oyster Bay, where Ethel was regarded as a church and community leader earning her the nickname "Queen of Oyster Bay".

In her later years, Ethel Derby devoted more time to the American Civil Rights Movement, a cause she had long been devoted to. She worked on a smaller scale than her first-cousin, Eleanor Roosevelt and believed in solving local problems before working nationally.

When she felt Black residents were being discriminated against, Mrs. Derby formed a committee to bring low-income housing into Oyster Bay. The proposal initially was rebuffed by most of the residents. Ethel had her friends meet at her house where she convinced them that this was a good idea and the housing project was successfully completed. A large number of blacks continue to reside in these areas Mrs. Derby helped to build.

In 1960, she made a seconding speech for the nomination of Richard Nixon at the Republican National Convention.

By 1975, Mrs. Derby was in visibly weak condition. In 1977 she made her final visit to the White House to see Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn. Finally, in December, 1977, Mrs. Ethel Roosevelt Derby died at her Old Adam House in Oyster Bay, New York aged 86 years; she is interred in the nearby Youngs Memorial Cemetery where her parents, husband and other relatives are also interred. She was survived by her two daughters, Edith and Sarah (the latter has since died), nine grandchildren (one of whom has died) and two siblings, Archie Roosevelt and Alice Longworth who both are now deceased.

Ethel Derby's niece, Susan Roosevelt Weld who was an admirer of "Auntie Ethel", named her daughter Ethel Derby Weld even though she knew the name was "out of fashion" at the time.
Although a die-hard Republican, Ethel often referred to herself as "a liberal Republican."

She was born August 13, 1891 and died December 10, 1977. Ethel was a favorite of the public. She married Richard Derby, a medical doctor, and had four children. The nation saw her again in 1960 when she made a seconding speech for the nomination of Richard Nixon at the Republican National Convention.



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FAMILY
Daughter Sarah Gannett 1920-1999
Father Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt 1858-1919
Grandfather Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. 1831-1878
Great-Grandfather Cornelius Roosevelt 1794-1871
Grand Uncle Silas Weir Roosevelt 1823-1870
1st Cousin Once Removed James West Roosevelt 1858-1896
2nd Cousin Nicholas Roosevelt 1893-1982
Grand Uncle Robert B. Roosevelt 1829-1906
Aunt Corinna Roosevelt Robinson 1851-1933
1st Cousin Theodore Douglas Robinson 1883-1934
1st Cousin Corinne R. Alsop 1886-1971
Uncle Elliott B. Roosevelt 1860-1894
1st Cousin Eleanor Roosevelt 1884-1962
1st Cousin Gracie Hall Roosevelt 1891-1941
Sister Alice Roosevelt Longworth 1884-1980
Niece Paulina Longworth 1925-1957
Brother Theodore Roosevelt Jr. 1887-1944
Nephew Quentin Roosevelt II 1919-1948
Brother Kermit Roosevelt 1889-1943
Nephew Kermit "Kim" Roosevelt, Jr. 1916-2000
Niece Belle Roosevelt Palfrey 1920-1985
Brother Archibald "Archie" Bulloch Roosevelt 1894-1981
Brother Quentin Roosevelt 1897-1918
Mother Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt 1861-1948

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