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Elliott Roosevelt (general)

Elliott Roosevelt (September 23, 1910 – October 27, 1990) was an American aviation official and wartime officer in the United States Army Air Forces, reaching the rank of brigadier general. He was a son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.

Elliott Roosevelt
Roosevelt receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross in Algiers
24th Mayor of Miami Beach, Florida
In office
June 1, 1965 – June 6, 1967
Preceded byMelvin Richard
Succeeded byJay Dermer
Personal details
Born(1910-09-23)September 23, 1910
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedOctober 27, 1990(1990-10-27) (aged 80)
Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S.
Cause of deathHeart failure
Spouses
Elizabeth Browning Donner
(m. 1932; div. 1933)
Ruth Josephine Googins
(m. 1933; div. 1944)
(m. 1944; div. 1950)
Minnewa Bell
(m. 1951; div. 1960)
Patricia Peabody Whitehead
(m. 1960)
Children5
Parent(s)Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt
RelativesRoosevelt family
EducationHun School of Princeton
Groton School
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Army Air Forces
Years of service1940–1945
RankBrigadier General
Commands90th Photographic Wing
325th Photographic Wing
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsLegion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross
Air Medal (12)

As a reconnaissance commander, Roosevelt pioneered new techniques in night photography and meteorological data-gathering, but his claims to a distinguished record on combat missions have been largely discounted.

After the war ended, he faced an investigation by the United States Congress on charges of corruption, including accusations that he had recommended the purchase of the experimental Hughes XF-11 reconnaissance aircraft ahead of a Lockheed model that was believed to be superior. Ultimately, he was found blameless.

Roosevelt published a book about his attendance at several major Allied war conferences and a controversial exposé of his parents' private life. He also wrote 22 mystery novels. His career also embraced broadcasting, ranching, politics and business. He served as the 24th mayor of Miami Beach, Florida from 1965 to 1967.

Early life

Elliott Roosevelt was a son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945) and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt (1884–1962). He was named after his maternal grandfather, Elliott Roosevelt (1860–1894). His siblings were Anna (1906–1975), James (1907–1991), Franklin Jr. (1914–1988), and John (1916–1981).

An older brother, Franklin, died in 1909 as an infant.

Roosevelt attended the Hun School of Princeton[1] and went to Groton School, as did his brothers. He refused to attend Harvard College. Instead, he worked a series of briefly held jobs, beginning with advertising and settling in broadcasting in the 1930s, including a management position in the Hearst radio chain.[2]

Military service

Roosevelt had always been interested in flight, and in 1933 he briefly served as general manager of Gilpin Airlines of Glendale, California, a small airline owned by Rep. Isabella Greenway (D-AZ), a close friend of the family. Later that year he became aviation editor for the William Randolph Hearst newspapers. After controversial involvement in the Air Mail Scandal and a secret attempt to sell bombers in civilian disguise to the USSR, he was hired as vice president of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce (see Aerospace Industries Association), a post he held until 1935. That year, he moved to Fort Worth, Texas and became involved in broadcasting and farming.

Roosevelt received a captain's commission in the United States Army Air Corps on 23 September 1940, his 30th birthday. His appointment in the middle of the 1940 election campaign caused a furious political row, although General Henry H. Arnold, the Chief of the Air Corps, asserted that there was no pressure or nepotism involved. After brief service at Wright Field, Ohio, he took an intelligence course and served with the 21st Reconnaissance Squadron at the new U.S. facility in Gander, Newfoundland.

In the summer of 1941, Roosevelt searched for and located air base sites in Labrador, Baffin Island, and Greenland and reported on conditions in Iceland and along the rest of the embryonic North Atlantic ferry route. During this time, he coordinated closely with FDR, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and General Arnold. Elliott Roosevelt was the first to interest Churchill in American bases in Africa (including Bathurst in the Gambia), a step for which his father was not yet ready.[citation needed] He served as a procurement specialist, navigator, and intelligence and reconnaissance officer and rose to brigadier general by January 1945. Despite having poor eyesight and being classified 4-F (unfit), he also became a pilot and reportedly flew 89 combat missions by the time of his inactivation from the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) in August 1945.[3]

While Roosevelt operated from Gander in August 1941, FDR detached him and brother Franklin Jr. to attend the Argentia (Atlantic Charter) summit between Churchill and FDR, which was nearby. In January 1943, Roosevelt accompanied FDR as a military attaché to the Casablanca meeting and the subsequent Cairo and Tehran Conferences in November–December 1943. At a dinner during the Tehran Conference, Joseph Stalin proposed to round up and shoot some 50,000 German officers and technicians after the war in order to permanently incapacitate Germany.[4] Roosevelt spoke in favor of the proposal[4] which earned him Stalin's cheers and the vocal and lasting hostility of Churchill[5] who said "I would rather be taken out into the garden here and now and be shot myself".[4]

Following a navigator/bombardier course in the fall of 1941 and a brief stint on antisubmarine patrol duty with the 6th Reconnaissance Squadron at Muroc AAB, Roosevelt received a top-secret assignment to carry out clandestine reconnaissance flights over the Sahara Desert, with emphasis on French West Africa, with which the United States was not at war. Having been successful with this (Project Rusty), he was given command of the new 3d Reconnaissance Group at Colorado Springs. From Gibraltar and then Oran, Algeria, he led this unit in Operation Torch, the invasion of Northwest Africa in early November 1942. Roosevelt (with a pilot) flew the first U.S. reconnaissance missions over the theater in a borrowed RAF de Havilland Mosquito. This led to a long campaign for the U.S. adoption of this British aircraft, as Roosevelt held the American counterparts (modified Boeing B-17Cs and early Lockheed P-38s) to be inadequate and unlikely to survive in contested airspace.

From Maison Blanche, Algeria, and after the fall of Tunis, La Marsa near ancient Carthage, Roosevelt pioneered new tactics, including night aerial photography and obtained before and after imagery of Rome during that city's first heavy bombing on 19 July 1943.

After his detachment to investigate reconnaissance issues in the United States (see the Hughes scandal section below), Roosevelt received command of the 8th Air Force's reconnaissance wing in England: the 8th Provisional RW, later renamed the 325th Reconnaissance Wing. During this period, Roosevelt worked on the shuttle-bombing project with the USSR, and participated in the May 1944 mission to the USSR which inspected the new American bases at Poltava, Mirgorod, and Piryatin. His units also supported the D-Day invasion of Normandy and the bombing campaign against V-weapon sites.

Following threats of resignation and pressure from "very high topside," in January 1945 General Arnold ordered General Carl Spaatz in England to appoint Roosevelt a rated pilot, and the president submitted his son's name to the Senate for promotion to brigadier general. By standard rules, Roosevelt was eligible for the rank, but not for the pilot's wings. Roosevelt continued in that rank in Europe until his father's death on April 12, 1945. After VE-Day, the Air Forces could no longer find a "suitable vacancy" for him, and he was on leave and had staff duties in the United States. By coincidence, his last day of service was VJ-Day.

 
BG Elliott Roosevelt as 325th Wing commander

Roosevelt commanded the following units:

  • 3d Reconnaissance Group, 11 July – 13 August 1942 at the rank of major; 30 September 1942 – 1 March 1943 ending at the rank of colonel[6]
    Assigned to Twelfth Air Force and flew aboard numerous aircraft types during reconnaissance missions for the North Africa campaign in Algeria and Tunisia
  • Northwest African Photographic Reconnaissance Wing, February 1943 – November 1943, as lieutenant colonel and colonel. This was a composite unit with U.S., British, South African, and French squadrons.[7]
  • 90th Photographic Wing, 22 November 1943 – 25 January 1944 at the rank of colonel.[8]
    Assigned to Twelfth Air Force, command and control organization that provided photographic reconnaissance to both Twelfth and Fifteenth Air Forces. Operationally controlled both 3d and 5th Reconnaissance Groups in Tunisia. The 90th's subordinate units reconnoitered airdromes, roads, marshaling yards, and harbors in Italy after the Allied landings at Salerno.
  • 325th Photographic Wing, 9 August 1944 – 17 January 1945 at the rank of colonel;[9] 22 January – 13 April 1945 ending at the rank of brigadier general.[9]
    Assigned to Eighth Air Force, command and control organization that through subordinate units, flew reconnaissance over the waters adjacent to the British Isles and the European continent to obtain meteorological data. Wing aircraft collected weather information needed in planning operations; flew night photographic missions to detect enemy activity; and provided daylight photographic and mapping missions. The wing also flew photographic missions over the Netherlands in support of Operation Market Garden in September 1944 and operated closely with tactical units in the Battle of the Bulge (December 1944 – February 1945).

Roosevelt stated that he flew 89 combat missions and 470 combat hours prior to being called back for his father's funeral in April 1945 (he did not return to active theaters). His decorations included the Distinguished Flying Cross.[10] He also received the Order of the British Empire, the Croix de Guerre and Legion d'Honneur, the Moroccan Order of Ouissam Alaouite, and the U.S. Legion of Merit. He ended the war holding the Air Medal with reportedly eleven clusters.[11] As a chase pilot for the Operation Aphrodite flights in 1944, Roosevelt said he witnessed the death of Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. over Blythburgh, England (there is no evidence in Aphrodite files that Roosevelt participated in this project, nor did he fly as chase pilot and witness the death of Joseph P. Kennedy).[12][13]

After the war, Roosevelt no longer played a significant role in aviation, although he maintained a private pilot's license and owned a small aircraft. He briefly served as president of short-lived Empire Airlines of New York (1946), citing his influence with the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), which, however, did not result in route awards. Reported attempts to assist Howard Hughes's TWA in obtaining air routes to the USSR also did not succeed.

Warplanes purchasing scandal

In August 1943, Colonel Roosevelt was asked by Chief of the Army Air Forces, General Henry H. Arnold, to investigate several reconnaissance aircraft under development to select a successor to the Lockheed P-38 (F-4 and F-5 in the recon version), but the reason for Arnold's choice of Roosevelt was not made public.[14] Roosevelt assembled a group of five air officers, including veteran RAF reconnaissance pilot Wing Commander D.W. Steventon. Upon their arrival in Los Angeles, Roosevelt and his group were met by eight limousines arranged by John W. Meyer, a publicist and former nightclub owner who was employed by Hughes Aircraft. On his first day in town, Roosevelt was taken by Meyer to the Hollywood film studio of Warner Bros. and introduced to Faye Emerson, an actress with whom Roosevelt was linked romantically (the two would eventually marry).[15] Over the next three days, Roosevelt and his group were seen with Meyer in Hollywood nightclubs and at parties in luxurious mansions in the company of aspiring actresses paid $100–400 per night by Meyer, the higher figure equivalent to $6,300 in current value.[16]

On August 11, Howard Hughes showed the group his Culver City aircraft factory, then personally flew them to see the private-venture Hughes D-2, an experimental twin-engine wooden aircraft then being test-flown at a Hughes facility at Harper Dry Lake in the Mojave Desert.[15] The aircraft had already been turned down ten months earlier by Chief of Army Air Forces Material Division Oliver P. Echols, for being inadequate to military service; it was considered unlikely to become successful for numerous reasons, wooden construction and Hughes's limited facilities among them.[17] Roosevelt and his committee, however, fervently recommended the D-2. When Roosevelt returned to the East Coast of the United States, Meyer hosted another round of parties and nightclub outings in Manhattan and arranged for Faye Emerson to accompany Roosevelt. Among many favors, Meyer gave Emerson $132 worth of nylon stockings, a rare treat during wartime rationing.[15]

On August 20, Roosevelt sent a report to General Arnold recommending immediate purchase of the D-2. On September 1, Arnold ordered Echols to contract with Hughes for an all-metal reconnaissance aircraft "against my better judgment and the advice of my staff."[18] During these two weeks, Arnold, Elliott Roosevelt, and FDR conferred frequently at the White House, and it is documented that Elliott Roosevelt complained to his father about Arnold's reluctance to order the F-11.[19]

Major General Charles E. Bradshaw wrote to Arnold to suggest that the Lockheed XP-58 Chain Lightning was much farther along in development and could outperform the D-2 in every important aspect, but was unsuccessful in halting the Hughes contract.[18] Implicating Roosevelt and United States Secretary of Commerce Jesse H. Jones,[20] Assistant Secretary of War Robert A. Lovett noted to Major General Bennett E. Meyers that "Hughes has got powerful friends here in Washington" and that, if the background of the contract were uncovered, "there's going to be an awful smell." Nonetheless, Hughes was given $43 million (worth $673,363,462 in 2021 dollars) to build 100 all-metal aircraft to be designated the Hughes XF-11.[18]

In 1947, Roosevelt telephoned Hughes to warn him that a United States Senate subcommittee (the "Brewster Committee", formerly the "Truman Committee") intended to call them both to account for financial irregularities regarding the XF-11 as well as for Hughes' H-4 Hercules, popularly known as the "Spruce Goose". As part of the ongoing "Investigation of the National Defense Program", on August 4, 1947, the subcommittee called Roosevelt and Meyer to testify about the Hollywood and Manhattan parties and women that Meyer had arranged and paid for. Meyer's extensive financial records during such parties showed him paying $200 for "presents for four girls" and $50 for "girls at hotel (late)".[14] At one point, Roosevelt asked Meyer: "[A]ny of those girls who were paid, were they procured for my entertainment?" Meyer responded: "I don't like the word 'procured,' because a girl who attends a party and is given a present is not necessarily 'procured'."[21] The committee found that Meyer had spent at least $1,000 in picking up Roosevelt's hotel bills as well as his nightclub and party checks,[22] and Faye Emerson's bets at Agua Caliente Racetrack,[23] and that Meyer had arranged for weekends in Palm Springs, California and Washington, D.C. for Roosevelt and Emerson, who eventually married in December 1944[14] after Roosevelt divorced his second wife in March 1944. The wedding at the Grand Canyon was also paid for by Meyer.

All told, Meyer reported to the committee that he had spent $5,083.79 ($78,256 in 2021 dollars) on entertainment for Roosevelt. In his own defense, Roosevelt testified that he never heard of the XF-11 until General Arnold let him know about it, and that several of the parties appeared to have taken place on days when he was out of the country on active duty. Roosevelt said: "If it is true that for the price of entertainment I made recommendations which would have in any way endangered the lives of the men under me...that fact should be made known to the public."[14]

Later life

After FDR's death in 1945, Roosevelt and his family moved to Top Cottage to be near his mother, who considered him her favorite child.[2] She gave him financial assistance throughout her life. In 1947, Eleanor bought from the FDR estate Val-Kill farms, the home she lived in after FDR's death, and deeded the property to Elliott Roosevelt. After he moved to Miami Beach and Havana with his fourth wife in 1952, his brother John bought the Hyde Park tract. Later, the property became the Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site.

Roosevelt pursued many different careers during his life, including owning a pre-war radio station network (Texas State Network) in Texas and living as a rancher. He again moved to Florida and was elected mayor of Miami Beach in 1965, then was unseated two years later.[2] After a business career marked by ties to organized crime, he was investigated by the Senate's "Jackson Committee" in 1973.

In 1973 during the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearings on corruption, Roosevelt was accused of involvement in an assassination plot on the Bahamanian prime minister. In 1968, he and an "alleged mobster front man," Michael J. McLaney, offered Louis Mastriana US$100,000 (equivalent to $779,000 in 2021) to assassinate Prime Minister Lynden Pindling. Mastriana was paid US$10,000 (equivalent to $78,000 in 2021) up front, most of which came from Elliott Roosevelt (as proved by a signature on a check for the money). The assassination plot was conceived after Prime Minister Pindling's failure to issue a gambling license to an associate of Meyer Lansky, (whom Michael J. McLaney worked for until his conviction in 1971). It was uncovered by Mastriana; he taped all of his conversation with Elliott Roosevelt, allegedly using equipment from the U.S. Postal Service. Roosevelt maintained that this was a lie until his death.[24][25][26]

Roosevelt emigrated to Portugal in 1972, but left for England after the revolution in 1974. He moved back to the United States, living in Bellevue, Washington; Indian Wells, California; and Scottsdale, Arizona.[27] As Roosevelt approached his eightieth year, his final ambition was to "outlive James." However, Roosevelt died at age 80 of heart and liver failure.[10] Brother James died 10 months later in August 1991.

Author and biographer

Elliott authored numerous books, including a mystery series in which his mother, Eleanor Roosevelt, is the detective, as Murieron and the First Lady (1984). Roosevelt described his experiences with his father during five important war conferences in his best-selling book As He Saw It. He also edited FDR: His Personal Letters, published after the war in four volumes. With James Brough, Roosevelt wrote a highly personal book about his parents called The Roosevelts of Hyde Park: An Untold Story, in which he revealed details about the sexual lives of his parents, including his father's relationships with mistress Lucy Mercer and secretary Marguerite ("Missy") LeHand[10] as well as graphic details surrounding the 1921 paralytic illness that crippled his father. Published in 1973, the biography also contains valuable insights into FDR's run for vice-president, his rise to the governorship of New York, and his capture of the presidency in 1932, particularly with the help of Louis McHenry Howe. A sequel to An Untold Story with James Brough, published in 1975 and titled A Rendezvous With Destiny, carried the Roosevelt saga to the end of World War II. Mother R.: Eleanor Roosevelt's Untold Story, also with Brough, was published in 1977; The Conservators, a political book, in 1982. Eleanor Roosevelt, with Love: A Centenary Remembrance, came out in 1984.

Marriages and children

 
Elizabeth and Elliott Roosevelt (standing) with Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt at the Little White House in Warm Springs, Georgia (May 1932)

Roosevelt was married five times:

  • On January 16, 1932, he married Elizabeth Browning Donner (1911—1980), daughter of William Henry Donner. They had one son, William Donner Roosevelt (1932—2003), an investment banker and philanthropist. On July 17, 1933, Donner filed a cross petition charging Roosevelt with "extreme cruelty" to a court at Minden, Nevada, and they were divorced.[28]
  • On July 22, 1933 in Burlington, Iowa, he married Ruth Josephine Googins (1908—1974). They had three children: Ruth Chandler Roosevelt (1934–2018), Elliott Roosevelt, Jr. (b. 1936), a Texas oilman, and David Boynton Roosevelt (b. 1942). Roosevelt and Googins were divorced in March 1944. She married Harry T. Eidson on June 23, 1944.
  • On December 3, 1944 at the Grand Canyon in Arizona, he married actress Faye Emerson. They were divorced on January 17, 1950. She died of stomach cancer in 1983 in Spain.
  • On March 15, 1951 in Miami Beach, Florida, he married Minnewa Bell (Gray Burnside Ross). They were divorced in 1960. Minnewa died in 1983.
  • On November 3, 1960, in Qualicum Beach, British Columbia, he married Patricia Peabody Whitehead.[10] Her four children, James M. Whitehead, Ford Whitehead, Gretchen Whitehead, and David Macauley Whitehead, were all adopted by Roosevelt. The couple's only child together, Livingston Delano Roosevelt, died in 1962 as an infant.

Military awards

Roosevelt's military decorations and awards include:

   
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
       

References

Citations

  1. ^ Staff. "ELLIOTT ROOSEVELT GETS AVIATION POST; President's Son is Elected Vice President of Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce. HE IS PRAISED AS A FLIER Head of Trade Body Says Youth Will Devote Full Time to Job – Now on Visit to Texas.", The New York Times, June 15, 1934. Accessed March 6, 2011. "Mr. Roosevelt, who is 23 years old, has been an officer of advertising agencies, a rancher, vice president of an airline and aviation editor of the Hearst newspapers since his graduation from the Hun Preparatory School in Princeton, N.J., in 1930. "
  2. ^ a b c National Park Service. . Archived from the original on December 18, 2007. Retrieved June 22, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Retrieved on June 12, 2009.
  3. ^ Hansen, pp. 4–17
  4. ^ a b c Churchill, World War II, vol 5, p. 294
  5. ^ Montefiore, pp. 469–70
  6. ^ Maurer, 1983, p. 34
  7. ^ Hansen, pp. 235–85
  8. ^ Maurer, 1983, p. 410
  9. ^ a b Maurer, 1983, p. 426
  10. ^ a b c d The New York Times, obituary, October 28, 1990.
  11. ^ Hansen, pp. 433–35
  12. ^ reference: 519.428-1 Aphrodite. Reel No. A5687, Air Force Historical Research Agency, Maxwell AFB, Alabama
  13. ^ b-29s-over-korea.com, Wayland Mayo. The Secret Mission of Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Part 2: "The Actual Tragic Mission"
  14. ^ a b c d Time, "Pay Dirt", August 11, 1947.
  15. ^ a b c Barlett, 2004, pp. 125–26.
  16. ^ Porter, 2005, pp. 548–49.
  17. ^ Barlett, 2004, pp. 88, 108–109.
  18. ^ a b c Barlett, 2004, p. 127.
  19. ^ Ward, 1995, pp. 239–40.
  20. ^ Barlett, 2004, p. 129.
  21. ^ Barlett, 2004, p. 149.
  22. ^ Time, "Check, Please!", August 4, 1947.
  23. ^ Higham, 2004, p. 114.
  24. ^ "Elliott Roosevelt Linked to Plot Against Pindling". The New York Times. Vol. CXXIII, no. 42242 (Late City ed.). WASHINGTON. 19 September 1973. p. 30. eISSN 1553-8095. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. Retrieved 3 January 2022. WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 — A convicted dealer in stolen securities told a Senate committee today that he was hired in 1968 by Elliott Roosevelt, a son of the late President and a former Mayor of Miami Beach, Fla. to assassinate Lynden O. Pindling, the Governor of the Bahamas.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  25. ^ Janet Staihar, "Elliott Roosevelt Linked to Murder Plot: Plot to Kill Bahamanian Cited," The Washington Post and Times-Herald, September 19, 1973.
  26. ^ AP, "Elliott Roosevelt, Linked to Murder Plot, Calls Charge 'Outright Lie,'" LA Times, September 19, 1973
  27. ^ Hansen, passim
  28. ^ "President's Son Divorced. Incompatibility Pleaded. Wife Succeeds". Hongkong Telegraph. Reuters. 1933-07-18. p. 1.

General sources

  • Barlett, Donald L.; Steele, James B. Howard Hughes: His Life and Madness. W. W. Norton, 2004. ISBN 0-393-32602-0
  • Flynn, John T. The Roosevelt Myth. New York: Devin-Adair, 1948.
  • Hansen, Chris. Enfant Terrible: The Times and Schemes of General Elliott Roosevelt. Tucson: Able Baker Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0615-66892-5
  • Higham, Charles. Howard Hughes: The Secret Life. Macmillan, 2004. ISBN 0-312-32997-0
  • Maurer, Maurer. Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Office of Air Force History, Diane Publishing, 1983. ISBN 0-912799-02-1.
  • Montefiore, Simon Sebag. The Court of the Red Tsar. Random House: 2003.
  • National Park Service. The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers
  • The New York Times, October 28, 1990. "Elliott Roosevelt, General and Author, Dies at 80".
  • Porter, Darwin. Howard Hughes: Hell's Angel. Blood Moon Productions, 2005 ISBN 0-9748118-1-5
  • Roosevelt, Elliot and Brough, James. The Roosevelts of Hyde Park: An Untold Story (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1973)
  • Roosevelt, Elliott. As He Saw It, Greenwood Press, 1946.
  • Time, August 4, 1947.
  • Time, August 11, 1947. , page 2 of 3.
  • Ward, Geoffrey C. Closest Companion, Simon & Schuster, 1995.

External links

  • List of Elliott Roosevelt's 22 mystery books

elliott, roosevelt, general, elliott, roosevelt, september, 1910, october, 1990, american, aviation, official, wartime, officer, united, states, army, forces, reaching, rank, brigadier, general, president, franklin, roosevelt, first, lady, eleanor, roosevelt, . Elliott Roosevelt September 23 1910 October 27 1990 was an American aviation official and wartime officer in the United States Army Air Forces reaching the rank of brigadier general He was a son of President Franklin D Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt Elliott RooseveltRoosevelt receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross in Algiers24th Mayor of Miami Beach FloridaIn office June 1 1965 June 6 1967Preceded byMelvin RichardSucceeded byJay DermerPersonal detailsBorn 1910 09 23 September 23 1910New York City New York U S DiedOctober 27 1990 1990 10 27 aged 80 Scottsdale Arizona U S Cause of deathHeart failureSpousesElizabeth Browning Donner m 1932 div 1933 wbr Ruth Josephine Googins m 1933 div 1944 wbr Faye Emerson m 1944 div 1950 wbr Minnewa Bell m 1951 div 1960 wbr Patricia Peabody Whitehead m 1960 wbr Children5Parent s Franklin Delano RooseveltAnna Eleanor RooseveltRelativesRoosevelt familyEducationHun School of PrincetonGroton SchoolMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States Army Air ForcesYears of service1940 1945RankBrigadier GeneralCommands90th Photographic Wing325th Photographic WingBattles warsWorld War IIAwardsLegion of MeritDistinguished Flying CrossAir Medal 12 As a reconnaissance commander Roosevelt pioneered new techniques in night photography and meteorological data gathering but his claims to a distinguished record on combat missions have been largely discounted After the war ended he faced an investigation by the United States Congress on charges of corruption including accusations that he had recommended the purchase of the experimental Hughes XF 11 reconnaissance aircraft ahead of a Lockheed model that was believed to be superior Ultimately he was found blameless Roosevelt published a book about his attendance at several major Allied war conferences and a controversial expose of his parents private life He also wrote 22 mystery novels His career also embraced broadcasting ranching politics and business He served as the 24th mayor of Miami Beach Florida from 1965 to 1967 Contents 1 Early life 2 Military service 2 1 Warplanes purchasing scandal 3 Later life 4 Author and biographer 5 Marriages and children 6 Military awards 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General sources 8 External linksEarly life EditElliott Roosevelt was a son of President Franklin D Roosevelt 1882 1945 and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt 1884 1962 He was named after his maternal grandfather Elliott Roosevelt 1860 1894 His siblings were Anna 1906 1975 James 1907 1991 Franklin Jr 1914 1988 and John 1916 1981 An older brother Franklin died in 1909 as an infant Roosevelt attended the Hun School of Princeton 1 and went to Groton School as did his brothers He refused to attend Harvard College Instead he worked a series of briefly held jobs beginning with advertising and settling in broadcasting in the 1930s including a management position in the Hearst radio chain 2 Military service EditRoosevelt had always been interested in flight and in 1933 he briefly served as general manager of Gilpin Airlines of Glendale California a small airline owned by Rep Isabella Greenway D AZ a close friend of the family Later that year he became aviation editor for the William Randolph Hearst newspapers After controversial involvement in the Air Mail Scandal and a secret attempt to sell bombers in civilian disguise to the USSR he was hired as vice president of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce see Aerospace Industries Association a post he held until 1935 That year he moved to Fort Worth Texas and became involved in broadcasting and farming Roosevelt received a captain s commission in the United States Army Air Corps on 23 September 1940 his 30th birthday His appointment in the middle of the 1940 election campaign caused a furious political row although General Henry H Arnold the Chief of the Air Corps asserted that there was no pressure or nepotism involved After brief service at Wright Field Ohio he took an intelligence course and served with the 21st Reconnaissance Squadron at the new U S facility in Gander Newfoundland In the summer of 1941 Roosevelt searched for and located air base sites in Labrador Baffin Island and Greenland and reported on conditions in Iceland and along the rest of the embryonic North Atlantic ferry route During this time he coordinated closely with FDR Prime Minister Winston Churchill and General Arnold Elliott Roosevelt was the first to interest Churchill in American bases in Africa including Bathurst in the Gambia a step for which his father was not yet ready citation needed He served as a procurement specialist navigator and intelligence and reconnaissance officer and rose to brigadier general by January 1945 Despite having poor eyesight and being classified 4 F unfit he also became a pilot and reportedly flew 89 combat missions by the time of his inactivation from the United States Army Air Forces USAAF in August 1945 3 While Roosevelt operated from Gander in August 1941 FDR detached him and brother Franklin Jr to attend the Argentia Atlantic Charter summit between Churchill and FDR which was nearby In January 1943 Roosevelt accompanied FDR as a military attache to the Casablanca meeting and the subsequent Cairo and Tehran Conferences in November December 1943 At a dinner during the Tehran Conference Joseph Stalin proposed to round up and shoot some 50 000 German officers and technicians after the war in order to permanently incapacitate Germany 4 Roosevelt spoke in favor of the proposal 4 which earned him Stalin s cheers and the vocal and lasting hostility of Churchill 5 who said I would rather be taken out into the garden here and now and be shot myself 4 Following a navigator bombardier course in the fall of 1941 and a brief stint on antisubmarine patrol duty with the 6th Reconnaissance Squadron at Muroc AAB Roosevelt received a top secret assignment to carry out clandestine reconnaissance flights over the Sahara Desert with emphasis on French West Africa with which the United States was not at war Having been successful with this Project Rusty he was given command of the new 3d Reconnaissance Group at Colorado Springs From Gibraltar and then Oran Algeria he led this unit in Operation Torch the invasion of Northwest Africa in early November 1942 Roosevelt with a pilot flew the first U S reconnaissance missions over the theater in a borrowed RAF de Havilland Mosquito This led to a long campaign for the U S adoption of this British aircraft as Roosevelt held the American counterparts modified Boeing B 17Cs and early Lockheed P 38s to be inadequate and unlikely to survive in contested airspace From Maison Blanche Algeria and after the fall of Tunis La Marsa near ancient Carthage Roosevelt pioneered new tactics including night aerial photography and obtained before and after imagery of Rome during that city s first heavy bombing on 19 July 1943 After his detachment to investigate reconnaissance issues in the United States see the Hughes scandal section below Roosevelt received command of the 8th Air Force s reconnaissance wing in England the 8th Provisional RW later renamed the 325th Reconnaissance Wing During this period Roosevelt worked on the shuttle bombing project with the USSR and participated in the May 1944 mission to the USSR which inspected the new American bases at Poltava Mirgorod and Piryatin His units also supported the D Day invasion of Normandy and the bombing campaign against V weapon sites Following threats of resignation and pressure from very high topside in January 1945 General Arnold ordered General Carl Spaatz in England to appoint Roosevelt a rated pilot and the president submitted his son s name to the Senate for promotion to brigadier general By standard rules Roosevelt was eligible for the rank but not for the pilot s wings Roosevelt continued in that rank in Europe until his father s death on April 12 1945 After VE Day the Air Forces could no longer find a suitable vacancy for him and he was on leave and had staff duties in the United States By coincidence his last day of service was VJ Day BG Elliott Roosevelt as 325th Wing commander Roosevelt commanded the following units 3d Reconnaissance Group 11 July 13 August 1942 at the rank of major 30 September 1942 1 March 1943 ending at the rank of colonel 6 Assigned to Twelfth Air Force and flew aboard numerous aircraft types during reconnaissance missions for the North Africa campaign in Algeria and Tunisia Northwest African Photographic Reconnaissance Wing February 1943 November 1943 as lieutenant colonel and colonel This was a composite unit with U S British South African and French squadrons 7 90th Photographic Wing 22 November 1943 25 January 1944 at the rank of colonel 8 Assigned to Twelfth Air Force command and control organization that provided photographic reconnaissance to both Twelfth and Fifteenth Air Forces Operationally controlled both 3d and 5th Reconnaissance Groups in Tunisia The 90th s subordinate units reconnoitered airdromes roads marshaling yards and harbors in Italy after the Allied landings at Salerno 325th Photographic Wing 9 August 1944 17 January 1945 at the rank of colonel 9 22 January 13 April 1945 ending at the rank of brigadier general 9 Assigned to Eighth Air Force command and control organization that through subordinate units flew reconnaissance over the waters adjacent to the British Isles and the European continent to obtain meteorological data Wing aircraft collected weather information needed in planning operations flew night photographic missions to detect enemy activity and provided daylight photographic and mapping missions The wing also flew photographic missions over the Netherlands in support of Operation Market Garden in September 1944 and operated closely with tactical units in the Battle of the Bulge December 1944 February 1945 Roosevelt stated that he flew 89 combat missions and 470 combat hours prior to being called back for his father s funeral in April 1945 he did not return to active theaters His decorations included the Distinguished Flying Cross 10 He also received the Order of the British Empire the Croix de Guerre and Legion d Honneur the Moroccan Order of Ouissam Alaouite and the U S Legion of Merit He ended the war holding the Air Medal with reportedly eleven clusters 11 As a chase pilot for the Operation Aphrodite flights in 1944 Roosevelt said he witnessed the death of Joseph P Kennedy Jr over Blythburgh England there is no evidence in Aphrodite files that Roosevelt participated in this project nor did he fly as chase pilot and witness the death of Joseph P Kennedy 12 13 After the war Roosevelt no longer played a significant role in aviation although he maintained a private pilot s license and owned a small aircraft He briefly served as president of short lived Empire Airlines of New York 1946 citing his influence with the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB which however did not result in route awards Reported attempts to assist Howard Hughes s TWA in obtaining air routes to the USSR also did not succeed Warplanes purchasing scandal Edit In August 1943 Colonel Roosevelt was asked by Chief of the Army Air Forces General Henry H Arnold to investigate several reconnaissance aircraft under development to select a successor to the Lockheed P 38 F 4 and F 5 in the recon version but the reason for Arnold s choice of Roosevelt was not made public 14 Roosevelt assembled a group of five air officers including veteran RAF reconnaissance pilot Wing Commander D W Steventon Upon their arrival in Los Angeles Roosevelt and his group were met by eight limousines arranged by John W Meyer a publicist and former nightclub owner who was employed by Hughes Aircraft On his first day in town Roosevelt was taken by Meyer to the Hollywood film studio of Warner Bros and introduced to Faye Emerson an actress with whom Roosevelt was linked romantically the two would eventually marry 15 Over the next three days Roosevelt and his group were seen with Meyer in Hollywood nightclubs and at parties in luxurious mansions in the company of aspiring actresses paid 100 400 per night by Meyer the higher figure equivalent to 6 300 in current value 16 On August 11 Howard Hughes showed the group his Culver City aircraft factory then personally flew them to see the private venture Hughes D 2 an experimental twin engine wooden aircraft then being test flown at a Hughes facility at Harper Dry Lake in the Mojave Desert 15 The aircraft had already been turned down ten months earlier by Chief of Army Air Forces Material Division Oliver P Echols for being inadequate to military service it was considered unlikely to become successful for numerous reasons wooden construction and Hughes s limited facilities among them 17 Roosevelt and his committee however fervently recommended the D 2 When Roosevelt returned to the East Coast of the United States Meyer hosted another round of parties and nightclub outings in Manhattan and arranged for Faye Emerson to accompany Roosevelt Among many favors Meyer gave Emerson 132 worth of nylon stockings a rare treat during wartime rationing 15 On August 20 Roosevelt sent a report to General Arnold recommending immediate purchase of the D 2 On September 1 Arnold ordered Echols to contract with Hughes for an all metal reconnaissance aircraft against my better judgment and the advice of my staff 18 During these two weeks Arnold Elliott Roosevelt and FDR conferred frequently at the White House and it is documented that Elliott Roosevelt complained to his father about Arnold s reluctance to order the F 11 19 Major General Charles E Bradshaw wrote to Arnold to suggest that the Lockheed XP 58 Chain Lightning was much farther along in development and could outperform the D 2 in every important aspect but was unsuccessful in halting the Hughes contract 18 Implicating Roosevelt and United States Secretary of Commerce Jesse H Jones 20 Assistant Secretary of War Robert A Lovett noted to Major General Bennett E Meyers that Hughes has got powerful friends here in Washington and that if the background of the contract were uncovered there s going to be an awful smell Nonetheless Hughes was given 43 million worth 673 363 462 in 2021 dollars to build 100 all metal aircraft to be designated the Hughes XF 11 18 In 1947 Roosevelt telephoned Hughes to warn him that a United States Senate subcommittee the Brewster Committee formerly the Truman Committee intended to call them both to account for financial irregularities regarding the XF 11 as well as for Hughes H 4 Hercules popularly known as the Spruce Goose As part of the ongoing Investigation of the National Defense Program on August 4 1947 the subcommittee called Roosevelt and Meyer to testify about the Hollywood and Manhattan parties and women that Meyer had arranged and paid for Meyer s extensive financial records during such parties showed him paying 200 for presents for four girls and 50 for girls at hotel late 14 At one point Roosevelt asked Meyer A ny of those girls who were paid were they procured for my entertainment Meyer responded I don t like the word procured because a girl who attends a party and is given a present is not necessarily procured 21 The committee found that Meyer had spent at least 1 000 in picking up Roosevelt s hotel bills as well as his nightclub and party checks 22 and Faye Emerson s bets at Agua Caliente Racetrack 23 and that Meyer had arranged for weekends in Palm Springs California and Washington D C for Roosevelt and Emerson who eventually married in December 1944 14 after Roosevelt divorced his second wife in March 1944 The wedding at the Grand Canyon was also paid for by Meyer All told Meyer reported to the committee that he had spent 5 083 79 78 256 in 2021 dollars on entertainment for Roosevelt In his own defense Roosevelt testified that he never heard of the XF 11 until General Arnold let him know about it and that several of the parties appeared to have taken place on days when he was out of the country on active duty Roosevelt said If it is true that for the price of entertainment I made recommendations which would have in any way endangered the lives of the men under me that fact should be made known to the public 14 Later life EditAfter FDR s death in 1945 Roosevelt and his family moved to Top Cottage to be near his mother who considered him her favorite child 2 She gave him financial assistance throughout her life In 1947 Eleanor bought from the FDR estate Val Kill farms the home she lived in after FDR s death and deeded the property to Elliott Roosevelt After he moved to Miami Beach and Havana with his fourth wife in 1952 his brother John bought the Hyde Park tract Later the property became the Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site Roosevelt pursued many different careers during his life including owning a pre war radio station network Texas State Network in Texas and living as a rancher He again moved to Florida and was elected mayor of Miami Beach in 1965 then was unseated two years later 2 After a business career marked by ties to organized crime he was investigated by the Senate s Jackson Committee in 1973 In 1973 during the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearings on corruption Roosevelt was accused of involvement in an assassination plot on the Bahamanian prime minister In 1968 he and an alleged mobster front man Michael J McLaney offered Louis Mastriana US 100 000 equivalent to 779 000 in 2021 to assassinate Prime Minister Lynden Pindling Mastriana was paid US 10 000 equivalent to 78 000 in 2021 up front most of which came from Elliott Roosevelt as proved by a signature on a check for the money The assassination plot was conceived after Prime Minister Pindling s failure to issue a gambling license to an associate of Meyer Lansky whom Michael J McLaney worked for until his conviction in 1971 It was uncovered by Mastriana he taped all of his conversation with Elliott Roosevelt allegedly using equipment from the U S Postal Service Roosevelt maintained that this was a lie until his death 24 25 26 Roosevelt emigrated to Portugal in 1972 but left for England after the revolution in 1974 He moved back to the United States living in Bellevue Washington Indian Wells California and Scottsdale Arizona 27 As Roosevelt approached his eightieth year his final ambition was to outlive James However Roosevelt died at age 80 of heart and liver failure 10 Brother James died 10 months later in August 1991 Author and biographer EditElliott authored numerous books including a mystery series in which his mother Eleanor Roosevelt is the detective as Murieron and the First Lady 1984 Roosevelt described his experiences with his father during five important war conferences in his best selling book As He Saw It He also edited FDR His Personal Letters published after the war in four volumes With James Brough Roosevelt wrote a highly personal book about his parents called The Roosevelts of Hyde Park An Untold Story in which he revealed details about the sexual lives of his parents including his father s relationships with mistress Lucy Mercer and secretary Marguerite Missy LeHand 10 as well as graphic details surrounding the 1921 paralytic illness that crippled his father Published in 1973 the biography also contains valuable insights into FDR s run for vice president his rise to the governorship of New York and his capture of the presidency in 1932 particularly with the help of Louis McHenry Howe A sequel to An Untold Story with James Brough published in 1975 and titled A Rendezvous With Destiny carried the Roosevelt saga to the end of World War II Mother R Eleanor Roosevelt s Untold Story also with Brough was published in 1977 The Conservators a political book in 1982 Eleanor Roosevelt with Love A Centenary Remembrance came out in 1984 Marriages and children EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Elizabeth and Elliott Roosevelt standing with Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt at the Little White House in Warm Springs Georgia May 1932 Roosevelt was married five times On January 16 1932 he married Elizabeth Browning Donner 1911 1980 daughter of William Henry Donner They had one son William Donner Roosevelt 1932 2003 an investment banker and philanthropist On July 17 1933 Donner filed a cross petition charging Roosevelt with extreme cruelty to a court at Minden Nevada and they were divorced 28 On July 22 1933 in Burlington Iowa he married Ruth Josephine Googins 1908 1974 They had three children Ruth Chandler Roosevelt 1934 2018 Elliott Roosevelt Jr b 1936 a Texas oilman and David Boynton Roosevelt b 1942 Roosevelt and Googins were divorced in March 1944 She married Harry T Eidson on June 23 1944 On December 3 1944 at the Grand Canyon in Arizona he married actress Faye Emerson They were divorced on January 17 1950 She died of stomach cancer in 1983 in Spain On March 15 1951 in Miami Beach Florida he married Minnewa Bell Gray Burnside Ross They were divorced in 1960 Minnewa died in 1983 On November 3 1960 in Qualicum Beach British Columbia he married Patricia Peabody Whitehead 10 Her four children James M Whitehead Ford Whitehead Gretchen Whitehead and David Macauley Whitehead were all adopted by Roosevelt The couple s only child together Livingston Delano Roosevelt died in 1962 as an infant Military awards EditRoosevelt s military decorations and awards include Legion of Merit Distinguished Flying CrossAir Medal with eleven clusters American Defense Service Medal American Campaign Medal European African Middle EasternCampaign Medal with seven starsWorld War II Victory Medal Commander of the Order of the British Empire United Kingdom Knight of the Legion of Honour France Croix de Guerre with palm France References EditCitations Edit Staff ELLIOTT ROOSEVELT GETS AVIATION POST President s Son is Elected Vice President of Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce HE IS PRAISED AS A FLIER Head of Trade Body Says Youth Will Devote Full Time to Job Now on Visit to Texas The New York Times June 15 1934 Accessed March 6 2011 Mr Roosevelt who is 23 years old has been an officer of advertising agencies a rancher vice president of an airline and aviation editor of the Hearst newspapers since his graduation from the Hun Preparatory School in Princeton N J in 1930 a b c National Park Service Elliott Roosevelt 1919 1990 Archived from the original on December 18 2007 Retrieved June 22 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Retrieved on June 12 2009 Hansen pp 4 17 a b c Churchill World War II vol 5 p 294 Montefiore pp 469 70 Maurer 1983 p 34 Hansen pp 235 85 Maurer 1983 p 410 a b Maurer 1983 p 426 a b c d The New York Times obituary October 28 1990 Hansen pp 433 35 reference 519 428 1 Aphrodite Reel No A5687 Air Force Historical Research Agency Maxwell AFB Alabama b 29s over korea com Wayland Mayo The Secret Mission of Joseph P Kennedy Jr Part 2 The Actual Tragic Mission a b c d Time Pay Dirt August 11 1947 a b c Barlett 2004 pp 125 26 Porter 2005 pp 548 49 Barlett 2004 pp 88 108 109 a b c Barlett 2004 p 127 Ward 1995 pp 239 40 Barlett 2004 p 129 Barlett 2004 p 149 Time Check Please August 4 1947 Higham 2004 p 114 Elliott Roosevelt Linked to Plot Against Pindling The New York Times Vol CXXIII no 42242 Late City ed WASHINGTON 19 September 1973 p 30 eISSN 1553 8095 ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Retrieved 3 January 2022 WASHINGTON Sept 18 A convicted dealer in stolen securities told a Senate committee today that he was hired in 1968 by Elliott Roosevelt a son of the late President and a former Mayor of Miami Beach Fla to assassinate Lynden O Pindling the Governor of the Bahamas a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Janet Staihar Elliott Roosevelt Linked to Murder Plot Plot to Kill Bahamanian Cited The Washington Post and Times Herald September 19 1973 AP Elliott Roosevelt Linked to Murder Plot Calls Charge Outright Lie LA Times September 19 1973 Hansen passim President s Son Divorced Incompatibility Pleaded Wife Succeeds Hongkong Telegraph Reuters 1933 07 18 p 1 General sources Edit See also Bibliography of Eleanor Roosevelt and Bibliography of Franklin D Roosevelt Barlett Donald L Steele James B Howard Hughes His Life and Madness W W Norton 2004 ISBN 0 393 32602 0 Flynn John T The Roosevelt Myth New York Devin Adair 1948 Hansen Chris Enfant Terrible The Times and Schemes of General Elliott Roosevelt Tucson Able Baker Press 2012 ISBN 978 0615 66892 5 Higham Charles Howard Hughes The Secret Life Macmillan 2004 ISBN 0 312 32997 0 Maurer Maurer Air Force Combat Units Of World War II Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Office of Air Force History Diane Publishing 1983 ISBN 0 912799 02 1 Montefiore Simon Sebag The Court of the Red Tsar Random House 2003 National Park Service The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers The New York Times October 28 1990 Elliott Roosevelt General and Author Dies at 80 Porter Darwin Howard Hughes Hell s Angel Blood Moon Productions 2005 ISBN 0 9748118 1 5 Roosevelt Elliot and Brough James The Roosevelts of Hyde Park An Untold Story New York G P Putnam s Sons 1973 Roosevelt Elliott As He Saw It Greenwood Press 1946 Time August 4 1947 Check Please Time August 11 1947 Pay Dirt page 2 of 3 Ward Geoffrey C Closest Companion Simon amp Schuster 1995 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elliott Roosevelt List of Elliott Roosevelt s 22 mystery books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elliott Roosevelt general amp oldid 1138693410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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