Curtis Bean Dall

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(Middle Life)
(Middle Life)
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===Middle Life===
 
===Middle Life===
<table><tr><td>http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wjhonson/CurtisDall2.jpg</td><td>Curtis and Anna had "two tow-headed children": Anna Eleanor Dall on 25 March 1927, and Curtis Roosevelt Dall on 19 April 1930.<sup>[[#Footnotes 2|F]]</sup>  Anna worked during the marriage, mostly in promoting her father's run for governor of New York, and later for U.S. President.  An article in the ''Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune'' dated 25 Feb 1933 states that she is, just then, the associate editor of "Babies &mdash; Just Babies" (perhaps a magazine). Curtis and Anna were apparently at this time, splitting their time between their Tarrytown estate and "...the Roosevelt town house on East Sixty-fifth street, New York"<sup>[[#Footnotes 3|H]]</sup> Anna casting about for some employment, took up her mother's mantle and decided to do some radio talks, for which she was paid perhaps as much as $3,000 each.<sup>[[#Footnotes 3|I]]</sup></td></tr></table>
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<table><tr><td>http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wjhonson/CurtisDall2.jpg</td><td>Curtis and Anna had "two tow-headed children": Anna Eleanor Dall on 25 March 1927, and Curtis Roosevelt Dall on 19 April 1930.<sup>[[#Footnotes 2|F]]</sup>  Anna worked during the marriage, mostly in promoting her father's run for governor of New York, and later for U.S. President.  An article in the ''Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune'' dated 25 Feb 1933 states that she is, just then, the associate editor of "Babies &mdash; Just Babies" (perhaps a magazine). Curtis and Anna were apparently at this time, splitting their time between their Tarrytown estate and "...the Roosevelt town house on East Sixty-fifth street, New York"<sup>[[#Footnotes 3|H]]</sup> Anna casting about for some employment, took up her mother's mantle and decided to do some radio talks, for which she was paid perhaps as much as $3,000 each.<sup>[[#Footnotes 3|I]]</sup>
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Curtis had resigned his position on the New York stock exchange at the end of 1932, but a few months later joined the Cotton Exchange, and then the Chicago Board of Trade dealing in grain and stocks.</td></tr></table>
  
  

Revision as of 19:34, 4 June 2008

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