Your TR Source

Advertising--Confectionery

3 Results

Theodore Roosevelt chocolate bars

Theodore Roosevelt chocolate bars

Advertisement for Theodore Roosevelt chocolate bars offered by the Chocolate Lady of Oyster Bay, New York, which was in business from 2007 to 2012.  The advertisement is a booster ad which features not only the product but the business’s support of the Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal. The advertisement shows two Roosevelt chocolate bars and a list of products offered by the Chocolate Lady. 

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Creation Date

2009

Book reviews

Book reviews

The “Book Review” section features two works that examine aspects of Theodore Roosevelt’s outdoor life. Michael L. Manson finds that the third edition of R.L. Wilson’s Theodore Roosevelt: Hunter-Conservationist deals mostly with Roosevelt’s use of, fondness for, and collection of firearms. Manson praises contributions to the work by Lowell E. Baier and John Milius, and he finds the book beautiful with its many photographs and illustrations. Becoming Teddy Roosevelt highlights the friendship between Roosevelt and William Wingate Sewall who would mentor, tutor, and guide a young Roosevelt in the woods of Maine and who would try his hand as a cowboy on Roosevelt’s Elkhorn Ranch.

The section features illustrations of both books’ covers along with an advertisement from The Chocolate Lady of Oyster Bay, New York.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

George W. Goethals, Theodore Roosevelt, John F. Stevens: The transfer of authority (February-April 1907)

George W. Goethals, Theodore Roosevelt, John F. Stevens: The transfer of authority (February-April 1907)

Thomas R. Goethals describes the appointment of his grandfather, George W. Goethals, as chairman and chief engineer of the Panama Canal Commission in 1907. He recounts President Theodore Roosevelt’s repeated reorganization of the commission and his desire to place the project under the authority of the Corps of Engineers of the United States Army. Goethals notes the rapport quickly established between Roosevelt and Goethals, and he details Goethals’s concern over having to replace the very popular John F. Stevens as chief engineer of the project. Goethals notes that his grandfather was most worried about managing the people who would actually build the canal, and he highlights Goethals first speech in Panama in which he tried to reassure them that he would not militarize the project. Goethals also stresses the important role played by Secretary of War William Howard Taft in staffing and overseeing the construction of the canal.

The article includes nine photographs, including five of George W. Goethals, four illustrations, and one map of the canal zone. An advertisement for the Chocolate Lady candy store of Oyster Bay, New York, appears at the conclusion of the article.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal