Letter from William Loeb to Noah Seaman
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1904-03-03
Creator(s)
Recipient
Language
English
Your TR Source
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-03-03
English
William Loeb sends letters to William Emlen Roosevelt and asks him to return the letters when he is finished reading them. In a handwritten reply, Roosevelt states he will talk to President Roosevelt about the letters.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-07-09
William Loeb has directed Postmaster General George B. Cortelyou to wait to confirm the appointment of William R. Thomas for postmaster in Niles, Ohio, until receiving direction from President Roosevelt. Congressman William A. Thomas (no relation), who has proposed the appointment, is “greatly agitated over the Post Office case.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-12
Postmaster General Cortelyou thinks there are strong reasons why Chaplain William Henry Reaney should remain at Brooklyn and hopes President Roosevelt will not approve of the change.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-03-28
On behalf of President Roosevelt, William Loeb instructs the Cabinet departments that they must stop making exceptions to the classified service in the matter of appointments. When exceptions are necessary, a report to Roosevelt is required at the end of the year.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-02-28
William Loeb writes to President Roosevelt regarding New York state politics and various appointments. Loeb reports numbers and advice from Representative John W. Dwight.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-01-21
William Loeb writes to Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Keep regarding a discrepancy between figures reported by the Census Bureau and by the Department of Agriculture.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-01-19
William Loeb discusses advertising in local papers.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905
William Loeb writes to President Roosevelt regarding the resignation of Interstate Commerce Commissioner Joseph Wilson Fifer.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-12-28
William Loeb asks Rudolph Forster to repeat his previous telegram as Loeb has no cipher with him to decrypt it.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-10-26
William Loeb asks Rudolph Forster, assistant secretary to the President, to forward a message to Baron Kogoro Takahira, Japanese Ambassador to the United States, from President Roosevelt, that Sergei Vitte has been appointed in place of Nikolay Valerianovich Muraviev, and is due to arrive in New York on August 1.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-07-13
William Loeb informs Rudolph Forster that Baron Takahira has been invited to lunch at Sagamore Hill as directed.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-07-11
The United States will do all that it can to preserve the territorial integrity of China and to ensure that her sovereignty is not injured in the coming peace negotiations. However, the United States will not be involved in the peace negotiations.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-07-06
William Loeb telegraphed a response to Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, telling her that President Roosevelt was better. At camp, Roosevelt had hunted a few days and rested a few days.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-04-29
Writing on behalf of President Roosevelt, William Loeb asks General G. L. Gillespie to look into a sword that was presented to George Washington by Frederick the Great. Loeb also encloses a recent letter from Arthur von Briesen to President Roosevelt regarding the sword.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-10-13
William Loeb encloses for Patrick Ford a letter from President Roosevelt to John B. Worrall, a Kansas City clergyman.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-09-01
William Loeb requests that Rudolph Forster send him the names of the Republican Senators who voted against the Gold Standard.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-08-23
William Loeb encloses a letter from Chairman of the Republican National Committee Cortelyou suggesting that Colonel Dudley Evans be considered when appointments are made to the Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy next year.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-08-19
In response to an inquiry from Senator Daniel, William Loeb forwards a number of documents from the Civil Service Commission related to the case of Walter Darrell. Loeb asks Daniel to return the papers to the commission once he has read them.
1905-06-19
William Loeb informs Senator Daniel that President Roosevelt has taken up the matter of Walter Darrell with the Civil Service Commission.
1905-06-15