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  1. Elliott Roosevelt was born on February 28, 1860. He was the third of the four Roosevelt siblings. As Elliott and Theodore grew up, they were very competitive with each other. Competitions of physical ability were often documented in Theodore’s journals. At a young age, Elliott was more academically successful than Theodore and appeared to be ...

  2. Elliott Roosevelt may refer to: Elliott Roosevelt (socialite) (1860–1894), American socialite, father-in-law of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, father of Eleanor Roosevelt, younger brother of President Theodore Roosevelt, and grandfather of Gen. Elliot Roosevelt (below) Elliott Roosevelt (general) (1910–1990), American general, son of ...

  3. Elliott Roosevelt. Editorial Department: The Roosevelt Story. Elliott Roosevelt was born on 23 September 1910 in New York City, New York, USA. He was a producer, known for The Roosevelt Story (1947), Today with Mrs. Roosevelt (1950) and What's My Line?

  4. 2 de mar. de 2017 · Elliott and Eleanor Roosevelt, July 1889. (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum) “The story of Elliott and Eleanor Roosevelt is essentially A Tree Grows in Brooklyn on the right side of the tracks,” says Geraldine Hawkins, author of Elliott and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Story of a Father and His Daughter in the Gilded Age (Black Dome Press, 2017).

  5. Elliott Roosevelt was born on September 23, 1910, in New York City, USA. His father, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, served as the 32nd president of the United States from 1933 to 1945. His mother, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, was a political figure, a diplomat and an activist in her own right.

  6. Elliott was the younger brother of Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, the twenty-sixth President of the United States. Anna Hall was descended from the Livingston family. The Livingstons, an old Hudson River family, played an important role in the formation of the new republic: one Livingston administered the oath of office to George Washington ...

  7. Elliott was the more academically successful and appeared to be the most promising of the four Roosevelt children, but that would change in time. Throughout his life, Elliott maintained a pleasant, but volatile personality bent on self-destruction. The Roosevelt children were schooled at home, as was customary for families of their position.