Roosevelt studied law and was admitted to the New York State Bar in 1850. He commenced practice in New York City.[2] During the
Civil War he was an active
Democrat, and a founder of the
Allotment Commission and the Loyal National League.[6]
His first experience in politics was in the organization of the Citizens' Association at the time of the
Tweed Ring administration in New York city. For several years, he edited the organ of the Citizens' Association, the New York Citizen, at first with
Charles G. Halpine, and after Halpine's death by himself. He was a founder of the
Committee of Seventy, and first vice-president of the Reform Club.[6]
Roosevelt was elected as a Democrat to the 42nd Congress (March 4, 1871 – March 3, 1873).[2] Although the pressure of anti-Tammany Democratic organizations forced
Tammany Hall to approve his nomination, he denounced its measures,[6] and did much to contribute to the breaking up of the latter organization.[7]
Roosevelt served as trustee representing the city of New York for the New York and Brooklyn Bridge from 1879 to 1882.[2] He was instrumental in establishing paid fire and health departments in New York City.[6] He was a member of the Board of Aldermen of New York City.
Roosevelt was an early angler and
conservationist. He organized several clubs to restrain the indiscriminate slaughter of game. He is credited with influencing his nephew, Theodore Roosevelt, to become a conservationist. He founded the New York State Fishery Commission in 1867, and was appointed one of the three fish commissioners. He served as fish commissioner for 20 years, 1868–1888,[2] without a salary. The reports of the commission were prepared chiefly by him, and led to the appointment of similar commissions in other states.
For many years, he served as president of the Fish Culture Association, of an association for the protection of game, of the New York Sportsman's Club, and of the International Association for the Protection of Game. He was a member of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.[6] As a member of the U.S. Congress, he originated the bill to create the
United States Fish Commission.[9]
Writer
Roosevelt was a popular author and a friend of writers such as
Oscar Wilde.[10] He sometimes wrote under the
pseudonymBarnwell or Ira Zell.[11] He edited Political Works of Charles G. Halpine, supplying a memoir (1869).
Robert's nephew Theodore Jr. credited him with being the first to scribe the "Br'er Rabbit" stories (which had been passed down orally by slaves), publishing them in Harper's, where they fell flat. This was a good many years before
Joel Chandler Harris published the
stories in The Atlanta Journal in 1879.
Personal life
Roosevelt was first married to Elizabeth Ellis (1829–1887), a descendant of the
Livingston family who was the daughter of John French Ellis (1794–1853) and Eliza Glen Thorn (1796–1855). Together, they were the parents of:[12]
Margaret Barnhill Roosevelt (1851–1927), who married Augustus Van Horne Kimberly (1845–1927) in 1889.
After the death of his first wife, he married his mistress, Irish immigrant
Marion Theresa "Minnie" O'Shea.[17] Although his children with Minnie were his biological children, they had been born prior to his wedding to Minnie and were known as his stepchildren. They had been listed as having a father named "Robert Francis Fortescue", and maintained the Fortescue name throughout their lives.[18] Together with Minnie, he was the father of:[17]
Kenyon Fortescue (1871–1939),[19] who became an attorney.[17]
Maude Fortescue (1880–1961),[20] who married Ernest William Sutton Pickhardt in 1900 and moved to London. Pickhardt was the son of Manhattan millionaire Ernest W. Pickhardt and the brother of Baroness Irene von Colberg.[21] They divorced before Pickhardt's suicide in 1909.[22] In 1945, she married Brigadier General Richard L. A. Pennington.[17]
^Kohrman, Robert (Summer 1987). "Checklist of Angling Pseudonyms". The American Fly Fisher. 13 (4). Manchester, VT: American Museum of Fly Fishing: 22–26.
^
abcdeSpinzia, Raymond E. (July 2010).
"Those Other Roosevelts: The Fortescues"(PDF). spinzialongislandestates.com. The Oyster Bay Historical Society’s The Freeholder. Retrieved 20 August 2017.