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Lisa Unleashed: Jack The Manchester Terrier, A Member Of Teddy Roosevelt's Family

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On a recent trip to Sagamore Hill in Oyster Bay, Long Island, N.Y., I went looking for a piece of my family history. In the process I discovered the depth of pet ownership of President Theodore Roosevelt at his family home.

The 26th first family had a plethora of pets, including notable dogs like Rollo the St Bernard, Sailor Boy the Chesapeake Bay retriever, Pete, the bull terrier, his son Archie’s favorite pet, Skip the rat terrier, and most importantly, Blackjack or “Jack” the Manchester terrier, the favorite dog of his son Kermit Roosevelt. All these called Sagamore Hill as well as the White House home.

While at Sagamore Hill to retrace my grandfather’s brush with history, I imagined the six Roosevelt children running around the three-acre garden with ponies and puppies. As a chauffeur for a Rockefeller in-law in 1925, my grandfather happened to be driving alone along Cove Neck Road in a rainstorm and came upon a well-dressed woman scurrying home. He offered her a ride and drove the former first lady to the front door of Sagamore Hill. As I walked the route of my grandfather’s good deed, I took in the landscape of the 155-acre working farm and discovered the family’s pet cemetery near the stately home.

The Roosevelt’s menagerie — some would say zoo — occupied the home from 1885 through the children’s grown up years, past 1919, the year of the President’s death at age 60 and until Edith Roosevelt’s death in 1948. The stable and lodge that housed the horses was built around 1884, before the farm went into production.

Horses were used to pull plows around the estate and carriage horses, like General and Judge, took them through the villages of Long Island around the turn of the 20th Century. Roosevelt was known for his jumping and polo playing skills and Bleisten was his favorite horse. Shetland ponies, like the famous pinto named Algonquin, taught the children to ride.

Beyond the family pets, the children treated many of the farm animals as their pets, too. The cows, horses, and chickens joined the dogs, cats, guinea pigs, rabbits, a badger, kangaroo rats, snakes, bear cub, lizard, and others. You can see the full list at presidentialpetmuseum.com.

Jack The Manchester Terrier

Several letters dated 1902 from Roosevelt’s years in the White House reveal the depth of the family’s affection for animals.

Teddy writes to a Mrs Field of Chicago that he had “such pleasure to send you a photo of my boy Kermit with Jack, the Manchester Terrier, who is absolutely a member of the family.” Later in the year, President Roosevelt is complaining to another family friend that he could not possibly take another collie puppy as a gift to the household because, “we already have three collies, one of them a puppy, and four other dogs in addition, and that I really have not house space or stable room for any more.”

They valued pets as family members and each got a formal funeral ceremony and burial. Kermit’s pet Jack was most beloved by the whole family. So much so that he was buried twice. First at the White House, where he was the nation’s first pet. He was laid to rest under one of the rose bushes in the famed garden. But then Mrs Roosevelt, the same fine lady my grandfather “drove,” insisted that he come home to be buried at Sagamore Hill. After Roosevelt was no longer President, she could not bear the thought of Jack being so far away under the gaze of politicians who cared nothing for the beloved black breed and her Jack in particular.

On an exhibit at Sagamore Hill Teddy is quoted in his autobiography as saying, “As for the dogs, of course there were many, and during their lives they were intimate and valued family friends, and their deaths were household tragedies.”

Photos of Jack adorn the exhibit, but so does the actual stone monument that marks his grave in the pet cemetery. It reads, “Faithful Friends, 1902, Susan and Jessie, Little Boz. 1903 Jack.

Today, Sagamore Hill is open to dogs to walk the remaining 83 acres of Teddy’s pet paradise. Of course, now visitors must abide by the National Parks Service regulations which are noted in Section 2.15 of the Code of Federal Regulations that states that pets must be “restrained on a leash which shall not exceed six feet in length, or otherwise physically confine a pet at all times.” So, while still pet friendly, it’s not quite the same as a century before when animals roamed free across the “Summer White House” lawn.

Lisa Peterson, lifelong horse lover, equestrian and owner/breeder/handler of champion Norwegian Elkhound show dogs, has worn many hats as journalist, communications director, columnist, blogger and podcast host. She lives in Newtown with her husband and three dogs.

Contact Lisa via lisa@lisaunleashed.com or at her blog lisaunleashed.com.

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