Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Joseph Bucklin Bishop
President Roosevelt admired the editorial and is pleased about the change in sentiment in New York.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1904-01-30
Your TR Source
President Roosevelt admired the editorial and is pleased about the change in sentiment in New York.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-30
President Roosevelt enjoyed the editorials. There has been a lot of intrigue surrounding Senator Hanna and Hanna appears to acquiesce to it. Roosevelt doubts Hanna will be able to cause him much trouble but Hanna’s attitude makes it difficult for Roosevelt not to take sides in Ohio.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-19
President Roosevelt asks Joseph Bucklin Bishop to meet with General Hubbard and determine his desires regarding the financial agency in Panama.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-20
President Roosevelt will discuss General Hubbard’s company serving as fiscal agent to the government of Panama with Secretary Shaw. He believes what Hubbard desires can be done.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-22
President Roosevelt thanks Joseph Bucklin Bishop for the congratulations, and hopes that Bishop will be able to visit soon.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-11-09
President Roosevelt asks if he can communicate with General Hubbard through Joseph Bucklin Bishop regarding Hubbard’s firm being established as a financial agency in Panama.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-17
President Roosevelt was pleased that Joseph Bucklin Bishop liked his Panama message. He believes it will render the passage of Senator Hoar’s resolution unnecessary. Roosevelt compliments Bishop on his article published in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-01-06
President Roosevelt was amused with Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s editorial on Senator Hoar.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-24
President Roosevelt was pleased with Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s editorials and will not be in New York on January 6.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-22
President Roosevelt describes Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s editorial as “admirable” and finds the defense of anarchists by the Evening Post and Shepard Warner to be infamous.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-05
President Roosevelt is pleased with Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s comments about Governor Odell and encloses a copy of a letter he just sent to Odell.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-11
President Roosevelt thanks Joseph Bucklin Bishop for the editorials and wishes that he could have seen the labor men who were “as clean, decent a set as any one could wish to see.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-26
Senator Platt and Governor Odell have agreed to work together to avoid a split in the party with Platt as leader and Odell managing the details. Opposing newspapers will do everything they can to break up the agreement.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-01
President Roosevelt enjoyed Joseph Bucklin Bishop’s editorials and is opposed to stirring up an unnamed matter at this time.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-12-02
President Roosevelt encloses a letter he wrote to Albert Shaw which dispels the rumored “conspiracy.” Roosevelt is concerned about the situation at the Commercial Advertiser and will find out if Shaw can convince the man to quit. Shaw might be hesitant due to the man’s influence in Iowa.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-13
President Roosevelt would like to have the original of the cartoon and believes that Charles Green Bush is the “ablest cartoonist in the country.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-14
President Roosevelt was glad to see the editorial on Panama and does not believe that the Democrats deserve any praise for their actions on Cuban reciprocity.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-17
President Roosevelt enjoyed Joseph Buckland Bishop’s editorial on statesmanship. The Evening Post has informed Roosevelt that they cannot support him in the next campaign due to his “policy of violence and wrong-doing in Panama.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-19
President Roosevelt laughed at the cartoon Joseph Bucklin Bishop sent and received an interesting letter from Nicholas Murray Butler, the subject of which he asks Bishop to discuss with Butler.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-10
President Roosevelt is not concerned about rumors that Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw will run for President, nor is he concerned about similar rumors he has heard about Secretary of State John Hay and Secretary of War Elihu Root.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-10-25