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MARTHA BULLOCH

Martha Bulloch age 22 - Was She the inspiration for the Scarlett O'Hara character?

'Martha Bulloch Roosevelt' (July 8, 1835February 14, 1884) was the mother of US President Theodore Roosevelt and the paternal grandmother of Eleanor Roosevelt. She was usually known as 'Mittie'.
She married Theodore Roosevelt, Sr., and had four children.

Contents
Childhood
Marriage to Theodore Roosevelt, Sr.
Death
Mittie described in Theodore Roosevelt's Autobiography
See also
Sources
Primary sources
Secondary sources
External links

Childhood


Martha was born in Hartford, Connecticut on July 8, 1835 to Major James Stephens Bulloch and Martha Stewart Bulloch, where her mother was visiting her homesick step-son, James Dunwoody Bulloch and Martha's future half-brother, at boarding school. After a few months in Hartford, baby Mittie and her mother returned to their home in Savannah where Mittie was initially raised. [1]
When she was about five, the family moved to Roswell, Georgia, a small southern town, just north of the Chattahoochee River, and north of Atlanta, Georgia. There they built the beautiful antebellum mansion, Bulloch Hall. Martha Bulloch's brothers, James and Irvine Bulloch were involved in the Civil War as Confederate officers. The Bullochs remained supporters of the Confederacy and war effort. [2]
Initially, the family was quite wealthy and the Bullochs were slave owners. In the years before Martha met Theodore Roosevelt, the family's fortunes had declined somewhat.

Marriage to Theodore Roosevelt, Sr.


Mittie married Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. on December 22, 1853 at the beautiful Greek Revival-style family mansion Bulloch Hall in Roswell, Georgia. She soon moved to Manhattan where she was joined by both her mother, Martha and her sister, Anna. Mittie bore four children: Anna (1855-1931), Theodore (1858-1919), Elliott (1860-1894) (the father of Eleanor Roosevelt), and Corinne (grandmother of Joseph and Stewart Alsop) (1861-1933).

Death


Martha Roosevelt died of typhoid fever on February 14, 1884, on the same day and in the same house as her son Theodore's first wife, Alice Lee Roosevelt, died of Brights Disease/Nephritis, and two days after the birth of her granddaughter, Alice.
Martha Bulloch Portrait on Display at her Sagamore Hill Roosevelt Home in New York and also in TR's Autobiography

Mittie described in Theodore Roosevelt's Autobiography


Theodore Roosevelt, in his autobiography published in 1913, described his mother with these words, "My mother, Martha Bulloch, was a sweet, gracious, beautiful Southern woman, a delightful companion and beloved by everybody. She was entirely 'unreconstructed' (sympathetic to the Southern Confederate cause) to the day of her death." [3]

See also



James Dunwoody Bulloch brother

Irvine Bulloch brother

Eleanor Roosevelt granddaughter

Alice Roosevelt daughter-in-law

Alice Roosevelt granddaughter

Sources


Primary sources


★ Roosevelt, Theodore. ''An Autobiography.'' (1913)
Secondary sources


★ Beale Howard K. ''Theodore Roosevelt and the Rise of America to World Power'' (1956).

★ Brands, H.W. ''Theodore Roosevelt'' (2001)

★ Dalton, Kathleen. ''Theodore Roosevelt: A Strenuous Life.'' (2002)

★ Harbaugh, William Henry. ''The Life and Times of Theodore Roosevelt.'' (1963)

★ McCullouch, David. ''Mornings on Horseback, The Story of an Extraordinary Family, a Vanished Way of Life, and the Unique Child Who Became Theodore Roosevelt'' (2001)

Morris, Edmund ''The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt'' (1979)

★ Morris, Edmund ''Theodore Rex''. (2001)

★ Mowry, George. ''The era of Theodore Roosevelt and the birth of modern America, 1900-1912.'' (1954)

External links



Bulloch Hall: Official Website

Women in History of Scots Descent

Additional Bio of Mittie

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