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Jack & Kitty Lee with James Roosevelt, 1937

Updated Mar 25, 2024
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Jack & Kitty Lee with James Roosevelt, 1937
Jack & Kitty Lee with James Roosevelt, 1937, in the White House.

Being serenaded by the tune "Tying Knots in the Devil's Tail", James Roosevelt (eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt" celebrates his 30th birthday at work in the White House.

Powder River Jack Lee is playing the guitar and his wife, Kitty Lee is singing. They were both from Deer Lodge, Montana.

Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress, Harris & Ewing, photographer
Date & Place: at White House in Washington DC, Washington DC USA
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Kitty Lee
Kitty Lee was born on May 1, 1868. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kitty Lee.
Age in photo:
69
Powder River Jack Lee
Powder River Jack Lee was born on October 1, 1874. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Powder River Jack Lee.
Age in photo:
63
James Roosevelt
US Congressman, US Marine Corps Brigadier General, Businessman, and Author. A member of the Democratic Party, he served in the US House of Representatives from California's 26th district for six consecutive terms from January 1955 until September 1965. Born James Roosevelt II in New York City, New York he was the oldest son of 32nd US President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt. He attended the Potomac School and the National Cathedral School in Washington DC and the Groton School, a private college preparatory boarding school in Groton, Massachusetts. After graduating in 1926, he attended Harvard University at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Upon graduating from Harvard, he enrolled in the Boston University School of Law at Boston, Massachusetts and took a sales job with Boston insurance agency and became so successful that within a year, he abandoned his law studies. In 1932 he started his own insurance agency and in 1934 he and Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. (father of US President John F. Kennedy) went to England to obtain the market in post-prohibition whisky imports and was instrumental in securing Kennedy's appointment as the US Ambassador to England. In November 1936 he was given a direct commission as a lieutenant colonel in the US Marine Corps and accompanied his father to the Inter-American Conference at Buenos Aires in December as a military aide. In January 1937, he was officially appointed the administrative assistant to the President and later that year he was appointed Secretary to the President. In October 1937 he became White House coordinator for 18 federal agencies. Following allegations that he used his political position to attract lucrative business to his insurance firm, he resigned his White House position in November 1938. He then moved to Hollywood, California where he became an administrative assistant for film producer Samuel Goldwyn. In 1939 he established Globe Productions, a company that produced short films for penny arcades and then resigned his commission in the US Marine Corps and was commissioned a captain in the US Marine Corps Reserve and went on active duty in November 1940. In April 1941 President Roosevelt sent him on a secret diplomatic mission around the world, meeting with the leaders of various governments, including king Farouk of Egypt, King George of Greece, and Chiang Kai-shek of China, that the US would soon become involved in World War II. In August 1941 he joined the staff of William J. Donovan, Coordinator of Information, with the job of working out the exchange of information with other agencies. After the Japanese surprise attack at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on December 7, 1941, he requested and received an assignment to combat duty and served in the Pacific Theater of Operations with the 2nd US Marine Raiders at the Battle of Makin Island. He was then given command of the newly formed 4th US Marine Raiders, but it was invalidated in February 1943, and he served in various staff positions for the remainder of the war. He was released from active duty in October 1945 at the rank of colonel and continued to serve in the Marine Corps Reserve, retiring in October 1959 at the rank of brigadier general. His military awards and decorations include the Navy Cross, the Silver Star, the American Defense Service Medal (with base clasp), the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal (with four service stars), the World War II Victory Medal, the Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon (with 1 bronze star), and the Philippine Liberation Medal (with one bronze star). After the war he returned to live in California and in 1946 he became chairman of the board of Roosevelt and Haines. In 1950 he was the Democratic candidate for Governor of California but lost to Republican incumbent Earl Warren by almost 30 percent of the votes. In 1954 he was elected to the US House of Representative from California's 26th congressional district and was re-elected to five additional terms and served from 1955 to 1965, resigning during his 6th term. He was one of the first politicians to denounce the tactics of Wisconsin US Senator Joseph McCarthy and was the only US Representative to vote against appropriating funds for the House Un-American Activities Committee. In April 1965 he ran as a Democratic candidate for Mayor of Los Angeles but lost to incumbent Sam Yorty in the primary. In October 1965 he resigned from Congress when President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed him a delegate to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The following year he resigned from UNESCO and became an executive of the Investors Overseas Service (IOS) in Geneva, Switzerland and resigned from that position in 1971, amid the fugitive financier Robert Vesco scandal. Despite having been a liberal Democrat all of his life, he joined the Democrats for Nixon and publicly supported President Nixon's re-election in 1972 and also supported Ronald Reagan for President in 1980 and 1984. In the 1980s he established the non-profit organization, the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, and its associated political action committee. He died at the age of 83 from complications following a stroke and Parkinson's disease and was the last surviving child of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. He authored several books, including "Affectionately, FDR" (1959, with Sidney Shalett), "My Parents, a Differing View" (1976, with Bill Libby), written in part as a response to his brother Elliott Roosevelt's book "An Untold Story", which told of Franklin D. Roosevelt's marital issues and was fiercely repudiated by the other siblings, and the novel "A Family Matter" (1979, with Sam Toperoff).
Age in photo:
30
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