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Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site

On September 14, 1901, Theodore Roosevelt took the oath of office as the 26th president of the United States in Buffalo, New York, at the home of Ansley Wilcox. Roosevelt’s predecessor, William McKinley, had been shot by an assassin at the Pan-American Exposition on September 6, dying at 2:15 a.m. on September 14. Wilcox’s home is now the site of the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site.

Currently, a collection of Buffalo newspapers regarding the shooting of President McKinley from September 7 to 25, 1901, as well as the scrapbook kept by Ansley Wilcox following the assassination attempt to Roosevelt’s inauguration in his library are available from the Inaugural’s collections.

Items from the Inaugural site’s collections were digitized and cataloged on-site and then transferred to the Theodore Roosevelt Center for inclusion in the digital library. As TR Center staff received materials from the Inaugural, the items were added to the digital library. See below to view items from this collection.

Digitization of items at the National Park sites was possible thanks to National Park Service Centennial Challenge Funding in partnership with Dickinson State University.

Inaugural Logo

588 Results

Wilson, Taft, Roosevelt: Their labor records compared

Wilson, Taft, Roosevelt: Their labor records compared

The handbill, associated with the 1912 presidential election, dedicates one page each to summarizing the labor records of Woodrow Wilson, William H. Taft, and Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt’s summary lists, in significant detail, his achievements as a member of the New York State Assembly, governor of New York, and President of the United States, as well as his Progressive Party platform.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site

Creation Date

1912

Letter from James A. Edgar

Letter from James A. Edgar

James Alexander Edgar invites the Middlesex County Progressive committeemen and their friends to a meeting on Saturday, September 11. Edgar provides details of the Progressive Party’s decision to endorse candidates from other political parties that share progressive ideals. He also refers to the Republican Party “robbing” Theodore Roosevelt of the presidential nomination in 1912.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site

Creation Date

1915

The Roosevelt family

The Roosevelt family

Color chromolithograph print of the Roosevelt family at Sagamore Hill, created from the 1903 Pach Brothers photo. From left: Quentin Roosevelt, President Roosevelt, Ted Roosevelt, Archibald B. Roosevelt, Alice Roosevelt, Kermit, Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, Ethel Roosevelt.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site

Creation Date

Unknown

Keep up the fight for Americanism

Keep up the fight for Americanism

Sepia-tone print of Theodore Roosevelt portrait with “Keep Up the Fight for Americanism” printed below. Also includes quote from Roosevelt read on January 5, 1919. Print was “Distributed by the Women’s National Committee of the American Defense Society … Proceeds for the Roosevelt Memorial Fund …[of the ADS].”

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site

Creation Date

1919