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  1. Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt (1861-1948) was Theodore Roosevelt’s second wife. The daughter of Gertrude Elizabeth Tyler and Charles Carow, Edith was born on August 6, 1861, in Connecticut. Raised not far from the Roosevelts in New York City, Edith and her younger sister Emily had a childhood made difficult by their father’s alcoholism, absences, declining fortunes, and eventual death in 1883.

  2. 6 de ago. de 2014 · Fifteen years into her own marriage to Roosevelt, she found herself presiding over the White House as First Lady. For decades, she enjoyed a sterling reputation among historians for her performance in the role. But then in 2018, historian Lewis Gould wrote a biography of Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt that revealed an unflattering side to her.

  3. Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt was born August 6, 1861 in New York City to Charles Carow and Gertrude Tyler. Although originally born into wealth, the family fell on hard times. The Carows then moved into Edith’s mother’s aunt’s home in New York City, where Edith quickly became friends with neighbors Corinne Roosevelt, who was her age, and Corinne’s older brother Theodore.

  4. Edith Roosevelt. Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt ( Norwich, 6 agosto 1861 – Oyster Bay, 30 settembre 1948) fu la moglie di Theodore Roosevelt e funse da First lady degli Stati Uniti d'America durante la sua presidenza dal 1901 al 1909.

  5. Sagamore Hill National Historic Site. Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt Gravesite. Fascinating details. Edith Roosevelt is Theodore Roosevelt’s second wife. He wrote that “the light has gone out of my life” in response to the death of Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt, his first wife. She departed, somewhat, from the first lady’s traditional role ...

  6. First Lady Biography: Edith Roosevelt. Her middle name was the surname of a paternal great-uncle, Robert Kermit. Charles Carow, (born 4 October 1825, New York, New York, died 17 March 1883). Son of a successful mercantile family, Carow pursued an import-export business.

  7. Edith Roosevelt. Even before she became First Lady, Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt was used to the demands of public life. Her husband, Theodore, had held many political positions during their marriage, including the governorship of New York. And as much as he courted the press and enjoyed public attention, Edith sought to avoid publicity and ...