The FBI released the below information:
When a
Florida auctioneer was asked to auction off a pocket watch from the late 1800s,
his research led him to believe that he may be holding a piece of U.S.
presidential history.
The auctioneer realized that the watch may have belonged to
Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, the 26th president of the United States.
He contacted two historic sites closely associated with Roosevelt—Sagamore Hill
National Historic Site and Theodore
Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site—who confirmed the
authenticity of the watch.
Roosevelt’s watch had been in possession of Sagamore Hill
National Historic Site since he died in 1919. They loaned the watch to the
Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site in 1971 for a six-year term
to be shown in an exhibition. The loan was extended, but, unfortunately, the
watch was reported stolen from the site in Buffalo, New York, on July 21,1987,
and wouldn’t be identified again until 2023 at the Florida auction house.
Since Sagamore Hill National Historic Site and the Theodore
Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site fall under the jurisdiction of the
National Park Service (NPS), they reached out to NPS to recover the stolen
artifact. NPS, the lead investigative agency, contacted the FBI Art Crime
team for additional assistance. Both the NPS and FBI confirmed
that this was the watch stolen almost 40 years earlier.
"This watch was a fairly pedestrian Waltham 17 jewel watch
with an inexpensive coin silver case. It's a 'Riverside' grade and model '1888'
with a hunter-style case, meaning it has a lid on either side which fold and
encase the dial and the movement," said Special Agent Robert Giczy, a
member of the FBI Art Crime Team who investigated the provenance of the watch
in this case.
Roosevelt
had many pocket watches during his life, but this one is unique due to its
sentimental value. Roosevelt received this watch from his youngest sister,
Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, and his brother-in-law, Douglas Robinson, Jr.,
prior to Roosevelt’s departure to Cuba during the Spanish-American War. The
inscription, which includes Corinne and Douglas' initials, reads:
"THEODORE ROOSEVELT FROM D.R. & C.R.R."
After NPS
recovered the watch, they coordinated with the FBI to navigate the asset forfeiture
process. As Paralegal Specialist Kellie Dodd from the FBI Tampa
Field Office explained, this "allowed the FBI to begin the process to
return the watch back to the rightful owner, the Sagamore Hills National
Historic Site."
Roosevelt’s
watch was returned to Sagamore Hills National Historic Site during a
repatriation ceremony in New York on June 27, 2024. Representatives from the
NPS and the FBI—to include our New York, Miami, and Tampa field offices and
members of the Art Crime team—attended.
"NPS does a great job in enforcing and recovering our national property,”] said Special Agent Giczy. "The repatriation of the watch would not have been possible without the close collaboration between the FBI and NPS. This partnership ensured that this historic treasure could be returned safely for future generations to enjoy."
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