Theodore Roosevelt standing with mostly African men in traditional dress
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt standing with mostly African men in traditional dress.
Collection
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
Creation Date
1910-04-09
Your TR Source
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt standing with mostly African men in traditional dress.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1910-04-09
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt standing behind the carcass of a rhinoceros.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1909-05-14
Photograph showing African people carrying supplies and equipment atop their heads for Theodore Roosevelt during his African safari.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph shows Theodore Roosevelt and others including African men with a dead elephant at Meru, Kenya.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph shows hunter R. J. Cunninghame, Kermit Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Edmund Heller, and Hugh H. Heatley standing with African buffalo skulls in front of tent.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph showing a male lion shot by Kermit Roosevelt.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt & Kermit Roosevelt with three eland heads in front of a tent.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt and African men with dead elephant.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Photograph shows Theodore Roosevelt with a dead elephant at Meru, Kenya.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919-05-14
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1909-1910
(1909, March – 1910) African Safari
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt on horseback watching two African porters bringing the skin of a second big lion to camp.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1909
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt standing next to lion killed on safari.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt watching a man measure a rhinoceros’s horn.
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
1919
Kermit Roosevelt has tried to answer the Winchester Repeating Arms Company’s question about the ammunition used on the Brazil expedition. Kermit checked with Anthony Fiala, but Fiala remembers only purchasing the rifle ammunition and that Theodore Roosevelt took care of the shotgun ammunition. Fiala will try to verify this information. Kermit suggests that the Winchester Company could also check with Frank Chapman or George Cherrie.
Buffalo Bill Center of the West
1927-12-28
Kermit Roosevelt has returned to school and is having a fine time. His arm had been bothering him while stag hunting in England but he is feeling better now. Roosevelt supposes John Wallace Riddle will be seeing Robert Harry Munro and Isabella Ferguson in New York; they have been having a tough time due to Robert’s health. He hopes their relocation to the southwest will help.
1908-1912
Kermit Roosevelt will be taking his final examinations in a week. He has found it difficult to get back into his studies after leaving during his freshman year and coming back a junior. Roosevelt plans to complete his degree next year.
1908-1912
Kermit Roosevelt has a year of hard work ahead of him with his Harvard examinations. He is also trying out for the rowing crew in spite of the bad weather and had a good holiday riding and jumping horses every day. Roosevelt visited Robert Harry Munro and Isabella Ferguson in New York twice. The Roosevelts had plans to take the Mayflower down the Mississippi River, but Archibald B. Roosevelt is developing diphtheria, so it is out of the question.
1909-04-09
Kermit Roosevelt appreciates the letters from Robert Harry Munro and Isabella Ferguson. He would like to visit Cat Canyon and see Martha and Robert Munro Ferguson.
1913-12-08
Kermit Roosevelt describes life in Buenos Aires, Argentina, with Belle Roosevelt; including Belle’s driving habits, their servants, and home life. He is pleased that Theodore Roosevelt won the libel suit. Kermit intends to enlist if the United States enters the war.
1915-05-26
Kermit Roosevelt sends Christmas greetings and hopes they might spend a Christmas together soon. He outlines his family’s plans for where they would like to live and work in the future. Argentina is on the “right side” regarding attitudes towards the war and Roosevelt would be enlisting if he were not married.
1914-12-23