Robert Sanderson McCormick was a United States diplomat. Born in rural Virginia, he was part of the is extended McCormick family that became influential in Chicago Life.
Background
Robert Sanderson McCormick was born July 26, 1849 on the family plantation known as Walnut Grove in Rockbridge County, Virginia. His father was William Sanderson McCormick (1815–1865) and his mother was Mary Ann Grigsby (1828–1878), whose family owned the Hickory Hill plantation.
When Robert was an infant, his family moved to Chicago to join the McCormick family agricultural machinery business, which became known as International Harvester. He attended prep school at the University of Chicago and went to college at the University of Virginia.
Education
Educated preparatory department University of Chicago, and University of Virginia.
Career
McCormick formed a partnership with his paternal cousin Hugh Leander Adams which they named McCormick & Adams, to invest in a grain elevator at St. Louis, Missouri in 1876. In the continuing national economic troubles in the aftermath of the panic of 1873, the enterprise failed.
Politically active and a major donor to the Republican Party, in 1889 McCormick was appointed as Second Secretary of the American Legation in London, where he served from 1889 to 1892, under Minister Robert Todd Lincoln. That led to his appointment as official representative for the Chicago 1893 Exhibition.
His diplomatic career took off when President William McKinley appointed him as minister to Austria-Hungary on March 7, 1901. McCormick presented his credentials on April 29, 1901, and was promoted to be the first American ambassador to Austria-Hungary on May 27, 1902. He was recalled on December 29, 1902. Following this, he served as United States ambassador to Imperial Russia to 1905. In 1905 he replaced Horace Porter as ambassador to France.
He retired in 1907 when his health started to decline. He was replaced by Henry White. He died from pneumonia on April 16, 1919 at his home in Hinsdale, Illinois. He was buried in Graceland Cemetery.
Achievements
Membership
Member reaper firm) and Mary Ann (Grigsby) M.
Connections
Marriage and Family
On June 8, 1876, he married Katherine van Etta "Kate" Medill (1853–1932). She was a daughter of Joseph Medill (1823–1899), who owned and managed the Chicago Tribune newspaper. They had three children:
Joseph Medill McCormick was born May 16, 1877. He became a US senator from Illinois.
Katrina McCormick was born January 17, 1879 and died that year on July 6.
Robert Rutherford McCormick was born July 30, 1880. He became the influential editor of the Chicago Tribune.