Richard Reid Rogers

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Richard Reid Rogers (1868November 10, 1949) was a prominent United States lawyer, specializing in transit law. His daughter Elizabeth married into the German nobility and the House of Hesse by marring Prince Christian of Hesse. (Rogers was also the grandfather of Princess Olga de Hesse and Princess Augusta de Hesse.)

Rogers graduated in 1886 from Princeton University before studying law at the University of Virginia. He served as the general counsel to both the Isthmian Canal Commission and later the Panama Railroad Company. He subsequently was counsel to the Metropolitan Street Railways and several of its successor companies.

On June 20, 1906, Rogers was appointed as general counsel to the Isthmian Canal Commission, to replace outgoing Governor Charles Edward Magoon. [1] In November of that year, President Theodore Roosevelt temporarily abolished the office of Governor of the Panama Canal Zone, to give greater autonomy to the chief engineer of the canal project. This order placed all of the duties of the Governor on the general counsel, in effect making Rogers the Governor in all but title. (Though he was not required to govern from the Canal Zone itself and he remained in Washington, D.C..) [2]

Preceded by
Charles Edward Magoon
Military Governor of Panama Canal Zone
1906–1907
Succeeded by
Joseph Clay Styles Blackburn


[edit] References

  1. ^ "Canal Commission's General Counsel", New York Times, 1906-06-30, p. 3.
  2. ^ "Shifts Canal's Heads", Washington Post, 1906-11-20, p. 1.