James Stephens Bulloch
James Stephens Bulloch was an early Georgia settler and planter. Bulloch was a grandson of Georgia governor Archibald Bulloch and a nephew of Senator William Bellinger Bulloch. He was also the maternal grandfather of President Theodore Roosevelt and a great-grandfather of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, her fifth cousin, once removed.
Life and career
James Stephens Bulloch was born in Savannah, Georgia, to a planter family. His parents were Ann Bulloch and Captain James Bulloch II. He had an elder brother, John Irvine Bulloch, and two younger sisters, Jane and Ann Bulloch.He was educated to become a planter and learned about managing crops and working with overseers to deal with slave labor.
Cotton mills and development of Roswell
Bulloch moved his family from Savannah in 1838 to north Georgia to partner with Roswell King in establishing a cotton mill in the piedmont near the fall line. They used water power for their mills. There in what developed as the town of Roswell, Bulloch built Bulloch Hall in 1839 with the labor of African-American slaves and craftsman. Today, his plantation house known as Bulloch Hall has been restored and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Bulloch also developed a plantation in the uplands, where his workers cultivated and processed short-staple cotton, the chief commodity crop. This cotton had been made profitable by invention of the cotton gin, and was planted throughout the piedmont.
Personal life
The younger James Bulloch first married Hester Amarintha "Hettie" Elliott, a daughter of Senator John Elliott and Esther Dunwoody, on December 31, 1817. Together, they had two sons:- John Elliott Bulloch
- James Dunwoody Bulloch
- Anna Louisa Bulloch, who married James King Gracie
- Martha "Mittie" Bulloch, who married Theodore "Thee" Roosevelt, Sr..
- Charles Irvine Bulloch, who died young.
- Irvine Stephens Bulloch