Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Corinne Roosevelt Robinson
Governor Roosevelt asks his sister to arrange a breakfast meeting with Jim Barnes and if her husband can forward an invitation to Douglas Stewart.
Collection
Creation Date
1900-12-10
Your TR Source
Governor Roosevelt asks his sister to arrange a breakfast meeting with Jim Barnes and if her husband can forward an invitation to Douglas Stewart.
1900-12-10
Governor Roosevelt asks if he can stay at his sister’s home over the weekend. He asks her to invite several people over to dine, including James Barnes, Nicholas Murray Butler, John Proctor Clarke, and Joseph Bucklin Bishop. Roosevelt also mentions that he has sent his nephew, Theodore Douglas Robinson, a letter.
1900-12-04
Theodore Roosevelt writes to Joseph Bucklin Bishop about the recent editorial in the Evening Post. Roosevelt thinks Oswald Villard, although educated, is an “utterly rotten and vile creature” and beneath other Harvard graduates in New York.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1915-10-25
Frederick A. Stokes hopes that Lieutenant Colonel Roosevelt considers publishing an account of his experiences in the Spanish-American War with the Stokes Publishing Company. Stokes assures Roosevelt that they will publish on Roosevelt’s terms and refers Roosevelt to Lieutenant Peary as a reference for the company. Stokes also mentions a few of the other writers who they have published, and asks that Roosevelt write him back while acknowledging how busy Roosevelt is with war work.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1898-05-07