Telephone message about Czolgosz papers
John E. Wilkie, chief of the Secret Service, has received the box and papers about Leon F. Colgosz that George B. Cortelyou sent him.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1901-12-10
Your TR Source
John E. Wilkie, chief of the Secret Service, has received the box and papers about Leon F. Colgosz that George B. Cortelyou sent him.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1901-12-10
George B. Cortelyou encloses a picture from Cornelius V. Collins, the superintendent of the New York Prison Department, for Secret Service chief John E. Wilkie. Collins told Cortelyou that this man is more depraved and “of a lower order” than his brother-in-law.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1901-12-04
Charles William Anderson reports on several members of the New York Republican State Committee’s opinions of President Roosevelt, Governor Charles Evans Hughes, and Secretary of War William H. Taft. The majority of the members have indicated that they would support Hughes’s run for president over Taft’s should Roosevelt not seek renomination, although Roosevelt would be their first choice. Anderson has heard some rumors among financial circles about an unnamed fourth potential candidate, but has not seen any support for him among the actual State Committee members.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1907-11-16