Postcard from Mrs. J. C. Hale to Theodore Roosevelt
Mrs. J. C. Hale sends Theodore Roosevelt best wishes on his birthday.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1911-10-28
Your TR Source
Mrs. J. C. Hale sends Theodore Roosevelt best wishes on his birthday.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-28
Charles E. Haupt sends Theodore Roosevelt his “assurances of the kindest good will” on his birthday.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-26
Russell Clark sends Theodore Roosevelt a card on his birthday, which is also his dad’s.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-27
W. Grote wishes Theodore Roosevelt a happy birthday and asks how to get a copy of his speech at the University of Berlin.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-27
Marcus Jaquette was born on Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday and finds Roosevelt’s book, African Game Trails, very interesting.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-27
Kathryn Jones sends Theodore Roosevelt “best wishes.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-27
Theodore R. Kunze sends Theodore Roosevelt “heartiest congratulations and best wishes.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-27
Margaret McLean Dill sends Theodore Roosevelt “many happy returns.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-26
Nellie Josephine Posey informs Theodore Roosevelt that she was looking through H.E. Bucklen and Co. Almanac finding that she shares her birthday of October 27th with him, Posey sends positive wishes to Roosevelt.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-22
C. Y. Lay asks Lyman Abbott who publishes Theodore Roosevelt’s books and speeches.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-11
H. Williams thanks Theodore Roosevelt for contributing more reading matter to the Hospital Book and Newspaper Society.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-07-18
Albert J. Engster is sorry to hear that Theodore Roosevelt’s problems continue and says he is unable to come before July 31.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-07-20
Second Panamanian Vice President Federico Boyd sends Theodore Roosevelt a copy of an article he wrote, along with his regards. On the front side of the postcard is the Panamanian flag, along with a portrait of Boyd.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-27
Alexander E. Barthe sends Theodore Roosevelt a photographic postcard as a “token of… personal discipleship in social service.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1910-12-07
Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt asks Frank Harper to find out the dates of two steamships sailing in September: A Red Star Line ship sailing from Antwerp and a Holland American ship from Rotterdam.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1909-06-17
Noah Seaman, the superintendent of Sagamore Hill, is not well-acquainted with saddles, and asks William Loeb to describe the Whitman saddle to him. Seaman was not able to pick it out himself.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1908-10-12
Photograph of Hook Point Camps, at Mattawamkeag Lake in Island Falls, Maine. William Wingate Sewall is listed as the proprietor with board being $2.00 per day. It also notes the “fine game section,” and that boats and canoes are provided.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-06-10
Postcard inviting John Buckley to a public meeting in Davenport, Iowa, where Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw will be speaking, defending the national administration on the tariff and railroad rate legislation. Buckley is invited to listen to Shaw’s “defense of Republican principles.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-06-12
Three postcards featuring images of steinstossen, a type of stone throwing, and ringen, wrestling. The information on the back of the postcards is in both French and German.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1901