Letter from Clifton F. Hodge to Theodore Roosevelt
Clifton F. Hodge thanks Theodore Roosevelt for his interest in the pigeon work. He sends a bundle of data and asks Roosevelt for permission to publish the last lines of a report and to substitute a word. Hodge shares his idea to have schoolchildren hunt for deer life and evidence of passenger pigeons. Perhaps Roosevelt could offer a financial reward to the first child in New York who finds a pigeon nest.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1910-08-15