Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Julius Chambers
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1918-11-04
Creator(s)
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
Recipient
Language
English
Your TR Source
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1918-11-04
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1913-08-28
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1913-01-09
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1917-09-05
Secretary of Theodore Roosevelt
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1917-07-31
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
President Roosevelt just received Julius Chambers’s book and looks forward to reading it. He would like to see him when he is in Washington again.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1908-04-25
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1918-02-26
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1918-02-15
Secretary of Theodore Roosevelt
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1916-08-07
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1916-03-29
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1914-07-24
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1914-07-09
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
English
Theodore Roosevelt appreciates Julius Chambers’ offer, but tells him it is not worth “taking Edmunds up.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1912-08-20
Theodore Roosevelt enjoyed Julius Chambers’ visit and expects to enjoy the book that has just arrived. Both Roosevelt and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt enjoy Chambers’ writing.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1912-08-12
Theodore Roosevelt thanks Julius Chambers for the letter and hopes to see him sometime. He has had a similar experience of “calling into the wilderness” long before anyone listened.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-04
Theodore Roosevelt denies that Mayor Van Wyck of New York asked the Rough Riders to parade and says that Van Wyck did not review the regiment.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-29
Theodore and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt enjoyed Julius Chambers’s article in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle on Roosevelt’s speech. Theodore Roosevelt feels that the New York papers are hypocritical; they condemn him for criticizing Woodrow Wilson, but the same papers had no problem denouncing Roosevelt when he was president. Roosevelt notes that he never expected to be blindly supported or not criticized while he was president.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1915-08-31
Theodore Roosevelt is very impressed by the article Julius Chambers wrote concerning the Anti-American sentiments coming from some German-American citizens. Roosevelt is sick of hyphenated Americanism.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1915-08-20
Theodore Roosevelt is glad Julius Chambers enjoyed his speech. Roosevelt enjoyed what Chambers said about the “Old Guard in the Republican Party.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1915-08-04
Theodore Roosevelt compliments Julius Chambers on his article entitled “What is Contraband?” Roosevelt wishes that he would write an article on being an American citizen without a hyphen.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1914-12-22