Letter from King Carol I to Theodore Roosevelt
King Carol I acknowledges President Roosevelt’s message of congratulations on his 40th anniversary on the throne of Romania.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1906-05-30
Your TR Source
King Carol I acknowledges President Roosevelt’s message of congratulations on his 40th anniversary on the throne of Romania.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-05-30
Representative Clark congratulates Theodore Roosevelt ant Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt on their silver wedding anniversary.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-12-02
Secretary of the Navy Meyer and his wife, Marian Alice Appleton Meyer, congratulate Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt on their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-12-02
Frank Andrew Munsey congratulates Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt on their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-12-02
Secretary of State Knox, at Henry H. Apple’s request, urges Theodore Roosevelt to accept the invitation to attend Franklin and Marshall College’s anniversary celebrations. As a citizen of Pennsylvania, Knox is interested in the state’s institutions.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-13
John M. Schick implores Theodore Roosevelt to attend Franklin and Marshall College’s 125th anniversary celebration.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-10
Alfred T. Waite asks Theodore Roosevelt for a message to be read at the Boston Press Club’s twenty-fifth-anniversary celebration. The message will then be included in a souvenir book.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-07
Representative Griest asks Theodore Roosevelt to accept President Henry H. Apple’s invitation to speak at the Franklin and Marshall College anniversary celebration.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-09
John Appleton Stewart received news that Alexander Lacoste has been offered the Presidency of the Canadian Committee regarding the Peace Centenary Celebration. Stewart is intimately acquainted with Lacoste and invited him to New York to meet members of the celebration’s American Committee. He hopes Theodore Roosevelt can attend.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-09
On behalf of the All Souls Universalist Church, Frederick B. Dalzell asks Theodore Roosevelt to speak at their celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Civil War. He encloses a letter from Francis A. Weisman with more information. Dalzell does not want to put himself under too much of an obligation to Roosevelt on this matter, as he may want to ask for a greater favor for himself in the future.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-03
Edwin L. Kerr congratulates Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt on their shared wedding anniversary. He comments on Roosevelt’s support of anti-race suicide theory and notes that he had nine children.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-11-04
E. J. Wheeler, the editor of Current Literature, asks Theodore Roosevelt for a few words of appreciation to celebrate the publication’s twenty-fifth anniversary.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-28
Lester Gunst shares a birthday with Theodore Roosevelt, and it is also his parents’ twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. During their celebration, his family will toast Roosevelt’s long life.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-26
George E. Barber asks Theodore Roosevelt to speak during the Eighteenth Street M. E. Church’s seventy-fifth-anniversary celebration.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-25
Charles W. Fairbanks invites Theodore Roosevelt to attend and speak at the 100th anniversary celebration for the battle of Tippecanoe, organized by professors from Purdue University.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-10-18
Albert M. Hyde invites Theodore Roosevelt to the annual “Rally Day” of the largest Congregational Sunday School in Massachusetts.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-09-02
Charles S. Grillo invites Theodore Roosevelt to address a gathering of Italian Americans at the forty-first-anniversary celebration of Rome’s return to Italy as its capital. The committee believes Roosevelt is the best choice, given that Guglielmo Ferrero “compared him to the Roman Caesar.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-22
William Nicoll asks Theodore Roosevelt to speak at the one-hundredth anniversary of Mt. Pleasant Academy.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-17
Charles L. Denison joins the general committee in inviting Theodore Roosevelt to attend the Belleville Day celebration.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-12
Charles Neumeyer, the editor of the Louisville Anzeiger, asks Theodore Roosevelt to contribute to a special edition of the newspaper in honor of “German Day.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1911-08-15