Letter from Robert Gray to F. G. Sherrill
President Eisenhower will be unable to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
Collection
Creation Date
1958-02-04
Your TR Source
Dickinson State University (DSU), located on the edge of the North Dakota Badlands, strives to be a premier university in the Upper Great Plains. DSU is also the physical home of the Theodore Roosevelt Center.
To celebrate the centennial year of Theodore Roosevelt’s birth in 1958, a Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Commission was created by the United States House of Representatives. The Commission worked with the Theodore Roosevelt Association to coordinate activities to commemorate the anniversary of Roosevelt’s life. In observation of the centennial, Dickinson State University, then Dickinson State Teacher’s College, organized a symposium to honor Roosevelt’s memory and to give recognition to the role North Dakota played in his life. The symposium theme was Responsible Citizenship, and the keynote speakers included Senator John F. Kennedy, Howard K. Beale, Hermann H. Hagedorn, Secretary of the Interior Fred A. Seaton, and Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin.
The 1958 Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium collection housed at DSU was digitized and cataloged by TR Center staff and an intern working on-site. The collection includes manuscripts, letters, pictures, newspaper articles, magazine clippings, comics, mementos, speeches and books about the image, life and legacy of Theodore Roosevelt. Highlights in the collection are a copy of a handwritten autobiography and other manuscripts authored by Theodore Roosevelt. Some of the latter are titled “The Home Ranch,” “Frontier Types,” “Sheriff’s Work on a Ranch,” and “The Ranchman’s Rifle on the Crag and Prairie.” The collection includes extensive documentation on the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium hosted by Dickinson State Teacher’s College along with photographs and articles about Roosevelt and his life.
For full details on the 1958 Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium collection, please see the Finding Aid.
See below to view documents from this collection in the Theodore Roosevelt Digital Library.
President Eisenhower will be unable to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-04
Senator Young would prefer not to contact Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks and suggests that the initial contact with Clare Boothe Luce originate from the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Commission. Young has been able to speak with Vice President Richard M. Nixon and was encouraged that Nixon may accept the invitation.
1958-01-29
Theodore C. Kellogg encloses a letter pertaining to Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Clare Boothe Luce.
1958-02-05
After speaking with Vice President Nixon, George Longmire is confident that Nixon will be able to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-06
Reverend Sherrill nvites James Bryant Conant to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-01-30
Harry A. Graves is interested in the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium and requests further information.
1958-02-10
Vice President Nixon will be unable to determine if he can speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium until May 15.
1958-02-11
Notes regarding potential speakers for the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium. A Republican speaker needs to be located.
1957-1958
Senator Young encourages Chief Justice Warren to accept the invitation to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-20
Senator Young encloses a copy of the letter he sent to Chief Justice Warren encouraging him to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-20
Minutes of the February 21, 1958, meeting of the North Dakota Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Commission. Elwyn B. Robinson hosted the meeting, and members attended a program with Eric Sevareid in the morning before the meeting.
1958-02-21
Senator Langer encloses a copy of the letter he sent to Chief Justice Earl Warren encouraging him to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-24
Senator Langer encourages Chief Justice Warren to consider speaking at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-02-24
List of judges that are to be sent a copy of an unnamed letter.
1958
Senator Langer has received President Scott’s letter regarding the Congressional Fellowship Program. He is working to secure Chief Justice Earl Warren as a speaker for the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium and has sponsored a bill with Senator Milton Ruben Young to issue a commemorative coin for the Theodore Roosevelt centennial.
1958-02-27
Chief Justice Warren will be unable to speak at the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-03-03
Senator Young encloses a letter from Chief Justice Earl Warren and expresses disappointment that Warren could not serve as one of the speakers.
1958-03-05
Chief Justice Grimson of the North Dakota Supreme Court supports the planned symposium and has written to Chief Justice Warren.
1958-03-06
On behalf of Vice President Nixon, Charles K. McWhorter denies permission for Nixon to be listed as a scheduled speaker on the brochure for the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium.
1958-03-07
Due to a large caseload, Chief Justice Warren will be unable to take part in the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial Symposium at the time proposed in the invitation. He sends his regrets.
1958-03-10