Who is going to do it?
Commentary on politics, social conditions, and religion.
Collection
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
Creation Date
1911
Your TR Source
Sagamore Hill was the home of Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States, from 1885 until his death in 1919. The collections held at Sagamore Hill National Historic Site are a combination of archival and artifact collections. Many of these collections were simply in the house when it was handed over to the National Park Service in 1962.
This collection has been digitized and cataloged on site at Sagamore Hill and then received by digital library staff. Our digital library currently holds four collections from Sagamore Hill, two of which have been reviewed and are included in the digital library. See below to view items from this collection in the digital library.
The Quentin Roosevelt collection contains report cards, school work, and correspondence from Quentin to his parents both from school and during World War I. It also includes the many newspaper articles and letters of condolence received by the family following Quentin’s death in combat in 1918. The Frank Harper collection primarily contains items pertaining to Theodore Roosevelt’s South American trip in 1913. Harper was Theodore Roosevelt’s personal secretary at the time. Menus, programs, tickets, invitations and newspaper articles chronicling Roosevelt’s tour of South American countries are the bulk of that collection.
Digitization of items at the National Park sites was possible through National Park Service Centennial Challenge funding in partnership with Dickinson State University.
Commentary on politics, social conditions, and religion.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1911
In this anonymous, undated poem, the author praises Theodore Roosevelt: “he would lift the burden of the weak.” The poem is written on stationery from the “Hotel Woodward, New York.”
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1901-1919
Article asserts that President Roosevelt keeps a manuscript copy of John J. Ingalls’s poem, “Opportunity,” in his White House office. The poem is included in the article. Abraham Lincoln memorized his favorite poem, “Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?” by William Knox.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1901-1908
A fragment of a letter to The Outlook editor Lawrence F. Abbott regarding a letter to Minnesota farmer Peter Shipman and the Postal Savings Bank Bill. The signature on the letter is illegible and there is no date.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
Unknown
Blank letterhead: “The Outlook, Office of Theodore Roosevelt”, address: “287 Fourth Avenue, New York.” Roosevelt wrote for the magazine beginning in 1909.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1909-1918
Article about Theodore Roosevelt meeting his new grandson, Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt Jr. The photograph shows Roosevelt holding the baby with the baby’s mother, Grace Stackpole Lockwood Roosevelt, looking on.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1918
Protocol for dinner at the Congress Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, including how to greet Theodore Roosevelt and when to proceed to the reception following dinner.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1912-06
In this article, Dr. Frank Crane promotes democracy over socialism.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1914
Editorial calls for the impeachment of Woodrow Wilson after his violation of the Constitution and the Hay-Pauncefort treaty in allowing Colombia to use the Panama Canal free of tolls.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1914-05-2
Upon hearing that Robert Watchorn may go into business with Frank Harper, Theodore Roosevelt took it upon himself to write a letter of recommendation for Harper, his secretary.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1914-11-05
This article prints a letter from Mexican General Venustiano Carranza de la Garza addressed to United States Consul J. O. Caruthers in response to a message from Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan. Carranza criticizes the United States for landing troops at Veracruz and for dealing with the presidential usurper Victoriano Huerta.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1914-04-22
Senator Lodge has only one of the documents Howes Norris has requested, the second part of the 1901 Smithsonian report.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904-12-14
Text of President Roosevelt’s inaugural address given in front of the U. S. Capitol building
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1905-03-04
Circular relating to historic and prehistoric ruins of the American southwest and their preservation under the General Land Office of the Department of the Interior.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904
Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt rendered on a silk panel. Roosevelt’s signature is woven beneath his portrait, along with the inscription, “Executed by the Paterson Silk Textile Institute.”
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
Unknown
Short biography of Vice President Charles Warren Fairbanks, extracted from Official Congressional Directory.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904
Description and photograph of a souvenir handkerchief from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition featuring the event program and images of President Roosevelt, President Thomas Jefferson, Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, and exposition president David R. Francis.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904
Booklet includes pictures and drawings to illustrate the life of President Roosevelt and his family.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904
Brigadier-General Boynton analyzes the military record of President Roosevelt.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904
Ticket admits William Emlen Roosevelt to the Republican National Committee offices in Metropolitan Life building.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1904-11-08