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Parliamentary reform

Parliamentary reform

Transcript of a speech given by Senator Hill in the U.S. Senate. Hill wishes to revise the rules for bringing a measure to a vote. He compares them to “a mere rope of sand, without strength or force.” In his view the existing limitations on debate are severely lacking, and should be in the hands of the majority, rather than a very vocal minority of the Senate. The senator states that the rules made sense a century prior when there were far fewer states, but there are simply too many complex issues being debated by too many people for the system to continue as it stands.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1894-12-18

Creator(s)

Hill, David B. (David Bennett), 1843-1910

Letter from F. V. Greene to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from F. V. Greene to Theodore Roosevelt

F. V. Greene is disappointed that Commissioner Roosevelt declined the invitation to head the street cleaning bureau for New York City. He believes the problem of municipal government is more important than the work of the Civil Service Commission and that Roosevelt would have direct influence in New York City, whereas on the Commission he is merely an adviser. Greene hopes Roosevelt might consider a role in city administration when his term on the Commission ends.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1894-12-27

Creator(s)

Greene, F. V. (Francis Vinton), 1850-1921

Letter from Hermann Speck von Sternburg to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Hermann Speck von Sternburg to Theodore Roosevelt

Hermann Speck von Sternburg reports on the fighting between Japanese and Chinese forces in Manchuria. He finds the Chinese ill prepared both on land and sea to meet the Japanese offensive and believes the Japanese could approach Peking within two months. In the naval battle of Yalu, for instance, the Chinese had the wrong ammunition on their ships. Had they had the right ammunition, they ought to have won the battle and kept control of the sea.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1895-02-19

Creator(s)

Sternburg, Hermann Speck von, Freiherr, 1852-1908

Letter from James Bryce to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from James Bryce to Theodore Roosevelt

James Bryce thanks Civil Service Commissioner Roosevelt for the new volume of The Winning of the West, which he is enjoying reading. He agrees with Roosevelt’s view that much modern American character is “traceable to the frontier life.” Bryce also notes that he and his wife have enjoyed seeing Roosevelt’s sister, notes that the liberal party in England is “having a pretty hard fight” and that politics are dominated by “currency problems.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1895-02-22

Creator(s)

Bryce, James Bryce, Viscount, 1838-1922

Letter from David Bremner Henderson to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from David Bremner Henderson to Theodore Roosevelt

Speaker of the House Henderson shared Civil Service Commissioner Roosevelt’s letter with a gentleman who claimed the law had been violated by a particular appointment. The complainant calmed down on reading the letter but still insisted that improprieties were being committed regarding places on the register of special pension examiners. Henderson acknowledges that it may be impossible to prevent all violations of the law, but he believes in Roosevelt to confront any one who might do so.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1895-02-28

Creator(s)

Henderson, David Bremner, 1840-1906

Letter from James Bryce to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from James Bryce to Theodore Roosevelt

James Bryce thanks Theodore Roosevelt for his recent letter and returns a letter he had enclosed. The political situation in the U.S. Congress concerns Bryce, especially “the steady decline…in the composition and character of the Senate.” He wishes he could visit with Roosevelt about these matters. He is tired of the burdens of office and wishes to have the opportunity to travel and visit friends like Roosevelt.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1895-04-10

Creator(s)

Bryce, James Bryce, Viscount, 1838-1922

Letter from Richard Harding Davis to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Richard Harding Davis to Theodore Roosevelt

Richard Harding Davis thanks Civil Service Commissioner Roosevelt for taking an interest in the case of Stephen Bonsal, a member of the U.S. diplomatic service. Davis has known Bonsal a long time and admires him greatly. He fears that President Grover Cleveland takes the charges against Bonsal seriously, and that Bonsal will consider himself disgraced if he is dismissed.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1895-04-12

Creator(s)

Davis, Richard Harding, 1864-1916