Warren Delano Robbins | |
Office1: | 3rd Chief of Protocol of the United States |
President1: | Herbert Hoover |
Term Start1: | September 15, 1931 |
Term End1: | June 11, 1933 |
Successor1: | James Clement Dunn |
Office2: | United States Minister to Canada |
Term Start2: | May 16, 1933 |
Term End2: | March 28, 1935 |
Predecessor2: | Hanford MacNider |
Successor2: | Norman Armour |
President2: | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
Office3: | United States Minister to El Salvador |
Term Start3: | February 27, 1929 |
Term End3: | April 30, 1931 |
Predecessor3: | Jefferson Caffery |
Successor3: | Charles B. Curtis |
President3: | Herbert Hoover |
Birth Name: | Warren Delano Robbins |
Birth Date: | 3 September 1885 |
Birth Place: | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Manhattan, New York, U.S. |
Education: | Groton School |
Alma Mater: | Harvard University |
Children: | 3 |
Relatives: | Katharine St. George (half-sister) |
Awards: | Order of Leopold |
Warren Delano Robbins (September 3, 1885 - April 7, 1935) was an American diplomat and first cousin of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He served as Chief of Protocol of the United States from 1931 to 1933 and as the U.S. Minister to El Salvador and United States Ambassador to Canada from 1933 to 1935.
Warren Delano Robbins was born on September 3, 1885, in Brooklyn, New York, and named after his maternal grandfather, Warren Delano Jr. He was the son of Katherine Robbins Delano (1860–1953) and Charles Albert Robbins (1854–1889). From his parents marriage, he had one sibling, sister Muriel Delano Robbins (wife of Cyril Edgar Martineau of London).[1] [2] After his father's death in 1889, his mother remarried to Hiram Price Collier, a Unitarian minister,[3] and they lived in a mansion in Tuxedo Park, New York.[4] From his mother's second marriage, he was the older half-brother of Sara Roosevelt Collier (wife of Englishman Charles Fellowes-Gordon) and Katharine Price Collier, a Republican U.S. Representative[5] who in 1917 married George St. George, third son of the second Sir Richard St George, 2nd Baronet.[6]
His paternal grandfather was Daniel Robbins, one of the founders of McKesson, Robbins & Co.[7] His maternal grandfather was a wealthy and prominent merchant who lived in China during the 1830s and he was a direct descendant of Philip Delano, a Pilgrim who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621.[8] Among his large extended family was aunt Deborah Perry Delano (wife of William Howell Forbes) uncle Warren Delano IV, aunt Sara Ann Delano (wife of James Roosevelt I), and uncle Frederic Adrian Delano.[3]
After attending the Groton School, which was run by Rev. Endicott Peabody in Groton, Massachusetts (where his cousin Franklin, who was three and a half years older than him, also attended), he graduated from Harvard University in 1908.
In 1909, Robbins began his nearly twenty-five year career with the State Department when he became a secretary on the staff of Charles Page Bryan, the United States Ambassador to Portugal. In subsequent years, he would work in a lower-level diplomatic function, including for Charles Sherrill in Argentina in 1909, France in 1911, and Guatemala in 1914.[9] Robbins received the decoration of Chevalier de l'Ordre de Leopold from the Belgian government for the service rendered to the mission.[10]
In 1916, he was briefly assigned to the Department of State's Division of Latin American Affairs before returning to Argentina in 1917 and then on to Chile in 1919. In 1921, he was promoted as Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs, before serving in Germany (1922) and Italy (1925).[11]
In 1929, he was elevated to Minister and given his first post as Chief of Mission, in Salvador. (The country would change its name to El Salvador while he was at that post.) In 1930, he was made a White House ceremonial officer and, in 1931, was reassigned to the State Department as Chief of Protocol of the United States. In this role, he was responsible for greeting foreign dignitaries and other ceremonial duties.[12]
In 1933, Robbins was assigned as Chief of Mission to Canada, a position he held until shortly before his death.
On September 3, 1910, Robbins was married to Irene de Bruyn (1887–1960),[13] a Belgian who was born and grew up in Buenos Aires, Argentina.[14] She was a daughter of Casimir de Bruyn,[15] banker, railroad man, and capitalist who was then the head of the Banco Franco-Argentina. Together, they were the parents of:
He was a member of the Tuxedo Club, the Knickerbocker Club and the Brook Club in New York. In Washington, he was a member of the Chevy Chase Club and Riding Club.
Robbins died of pneumonia at the Doctors Hospital in New York City on April 7, 1935, aged 49.[23] After a service at the Church of the Incarnation, he was buried at Riverside Cemetery in Fairhaven, Massachusetts. In 1936, Robbins' widow served as a special assistant at the All-American Conference for Maintenance of Peace in Buenos Aires. In 1937, Irene, an interior decorator, was appointed Assistant Chief of the State Department's Foreign Service Buildings Office, responsible for furnishing and decorating U.S. embassies, consulates and other facilities.[24] [25] His widow died in Hyattsville, Maryland in 1960.[13]
Through his eldest son, he was a grandfather of Elizabeth Robbins Hughes, Warren Delano Robbins III and Katherine Dudley Robbins.[16] [26]
Through his son Edward, he was a grandfather of Janet Robbins (1936–1941), who died young of polio, Edward Hutchinson Robbins (b.1940)[27] and Gordon Auchincloss Robbins (1942–2015), a "sculptor, fly fisherman, nationally ranked board sailor and snowboarder, and coach of Olympic medalists."[28]