Edith Derby Williams

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Edith Roosevelt (Derby) Williams (June 17, 1917June 8, 2008) was a historian, conservationist, a granddaughter of the 26th President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt.

Williams was born in New York to Dr. Richard Derby and Ethel Carow Roosevelt. Edith Roosevelt Derby was the second child of Mr. and Mrs. Derby and the eldest daughter. Former President Theodore Roosevelt is her grandfather. She was named for her grandmother Edith Roosevelt. Not unlike many members of her nationally prominent family, she took seriously her civic responsibities. She has been actively involved in Republican politics and addressed the 1960 Republican National Convention, seconding the nomination of Richard Nixon. For forty years she was the Republican Committeewoman for the state of Washington. Mrs. Williams served on the Board of Trustees for the Theodore Roosevelt Association where she received the Rose Award in 2004 for her many years of service and dedication to the organization. Williams has also been recognised for her work in behalf of conservation and promoting a healthier environment by reducing pollution.

In 1941 she married Andrew "Mike" Murray Williams (1917-1998). After World War II in 1946, the family moved to Washington State and settled in the Seattle area. The Williams' had three children, Andrew Murray, Jr. (1942-2004), Richard Derby (born c. 1944) and Sarah Gilmore (born 1948). Bruce K. Chapman is her son-in-law.

Williams died on June 8, 2008 after breaking her hip at her Vashon Island, Washington home.