Letter from Lovell H. Jerome to Theodore Roosevelt
Lovell H. Jerome requests a brief meeting with Theodore Roosevelt.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1911-01-07
Your TR Source
Lovell H. Jerome requests a brief meeting with Theodore Roosevelt.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-01-07
Lovell H. Jerome apologizes to Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt for being unavailable when she sent a messenger to him. Jerome assures Roosevelt he will be happy to help with anything she needs in the future.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-09-09
Colonel Jerome informs President Roosevelt that the Republican Committee has just nominated a strong ticket in New York state and he expects Roosevelt to win the state “by a very comfortable majority.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-09-16
Lovell H. Jerome acknowledges receipt of a letter from William Loeb that warned against including President Roosevelt in the Republican Club matter. The Republican Club meeting, attended by Booker T. Washington, Mr. Dunham, and Governor Benjamin B. Odell, covered plans to utilize the forces already organized in the South. Jerome mentions an effort in Kentucky to debar the negro vote.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-18
Lovell H. Jerome announces the formation of the Constitutional League, organized to enforce the United States Constitution. Jerome encloses a copy of Warren Mills’s Republican Club speech and writes of Ohio General Charles Dick’s introduction of a resolution regarding apportionment in proportion to active vote. Jerome mentions Senator Marcus Alonzo Hanna’s positive attitude toward this movement.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-16
Lovell H. Jerome recommends seeking out Senator Nelson Aldrich as a representative of John D. Rockefeller’s interests concerning a financial matter in which “great danger exists.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-07-16
Lovell H. Jerome reports that Illinois Governor Richard Yates’ wife, Helen Wadsworth Yates, has arrived and is at the Waldorf.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-07-18