Samuel Montgomery Roosevelt (February 20, 1857 – August 19, 1920)[1] was an American artist and merchant from New York City.
Early life
Roosevelt was born on February 20, 1857, in New York City.[1] He was the son of prominent businessman Samuel Roosevelt (1813–1878) and Mary Jane (née Horton) Roosevelt (1823–1901).[2] His brother was Nicholas Latrobe Roosevelt, the father of Henry Latrobe Roosevelt, who served as the Assistant Secretary of the Navy under their distant cousin, Franklin D. Roosevelt.[3]
His paternal grandparents were Nicholas Roosevelt, an inventor involved with the steamboat, and Lydia Sellon (née Latrobe) Roosevelt, daughter of his grandfather's friend and business partner, architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe.[3]
Roosevelt was also an active sportsman, skilled at fencing and interested in yachting.[7] He went to Colorado in 1878 on ranching and scouting expeditions with the ninth cavalry against the Ute Indians,[5] and was described as having been a "cowboy" for a period by a cousin upon his death.[1] He entertained frequently and gained notoriety for once serving a whole roasted baby lion to guests.[1] He was a chevalier of the French Legion of Honor.[1]