Richard Reid Rogers Explained

Richard Reid Rogers
Order:3rd Military Governor of the Panama Canal Zone
Term Start:19 November 1906
Term End:31 March 1907
Appointed:Theodore Roosevelt
Predecessor:Charles Edward Magoon
Successor:Joseph Clay Styles Blackburn
Birth Date:4 December 1867
Birth Place:Bourbon County, Kentucky, U.S.
Death Place:Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Alma Mater:Princeton University
University of Virginia
Parents:Benjamin F. Rogers
Elizabeth H. Jameson
Relations:John Jameson (grandfather)

Richard Reid Rogers (December 4, 1867 – November 10, 1949) was a prominent United States lawyer, specializing in transit law.

Early life

He was born on December 4, 1867, in Bourbon County, Kentucky, to Benjamin F. Rogers and Elizabeth H. (née Jameson) Rogers. After his father's unexpected death, his mother remarried to Judge Richard Reid. His maternal grandfather was U.S. Representative from Missouri, John Jameson.[1]

Rogers graduated in 1886 from Princeton University before studying law at the University of Virginia.

Career

He began his career in New York City with Guthrie, Cravath, & Henderson, before serving as the general counsel to both the Isthmian Canal Commission and later the Panama Railroad Company.[2] He subsequently was counsel to the Metropolitan Street Railway and several of its successor companies.

On June 20, 1906, Rogers was appointed as general counsel to the Isthmian Canal Commission, to replace outgoing Governor Charles Edward Magoon.[3] In November of that year, President Theodore Roosevelt temporarily abolished the office of Governor of the Panama Canal Zone, to give greater autonomy to the chief engineer of the canal project. This order placed all of the duties of the Governor on the general counsel, in effect making Rogers the Governor in all but title (though he was not required to govern from the Canal Zone itself and he remained in Washington, D.C.).[4]

Personal life

On June 25, 1891, Rogers was married to Sarah Eunice Tomlin (1867–1945) in Madison, Tennessee. They were the parents of one daughter:[5]

He died on November 10, 1949, at the University Club in New York City.[8] He was buried at the Machpelah Cemetery in Mount Sterling, Kentucky.

Descendants

Through his daughter Elizabeth, he was a grandfather of four: Elisabeth Auguste (1915–2003), Richard Christian (1917–1985), Waldemar (1919–2002) and Marie Louise Olga (1921–1999), who were permitted to title themselves Prinz/Prinzessin von Hessen (Prince/Princess of Hesse).[9]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Reid . Elizabeth Jameson . Judge Richard Reid: A Biography . 1886 . Standard Publishing Company . 57 . 26 May 2020 . en.
  2. Book: Canals . United States Congress Senate Committee on Interoceanic . Panama Canal: Hearings Before the Committee on Interoceanic Canals, United States Senate, Sixty-second Congress, Second Session, on H. R. 21969, a Bill to Provide for the Opening, Maintenance, Protection, and Operation of the Panama Canal, and the Sanitation and Government of the Canal Zone . 1912 . . 26 May 2020 . en.
  3. News: Canal Commission's General Counsel . . June 30, 1906 .
  4. News: Shifts Canal's Heads . . 1 . November 20, 1906.
  5. News: Tribune . International Herald . 1915: Prince Will Visit Fiancée . 26 May 2020 . . 7 January 2015.
  6. News: To Wed nephew of Kaiser . 1 . . 22 December 1914 . 20 June 2013.
  7. News: Times . Special to The New York . WILL WED GERMAN PRINCE.; Miss E.R. Rogers Engaged to Christian, a Captain in the Navy. . 26 May 2020 . . 16 December 1914.
  8. News: RICHARD R. ROGERS, A TRANSlT LAWYER; Counsel to Metropolitan Street Railways and Successors Here for 40 Years Dies at 81 . 26 May 2020 . . 11 November 1949.
  9. Book: . 1929 . . 480.