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Conrad, Holmes, 1840-1915

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Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Postmaster General Payne discusses various Post Office investigations. Payne mentions the investigation by Charles J. Bonaparte and Holmes Conrad of the charges made by Seymour Wilcox Tulloch, ex-cashier in the Washington Post Office. Payne urges President Roosevelt to order a full investigation of that office since John A. Merritt was appointed Postmaster General. Payne also tells Roosevelt he will send the report on the investigation of the New York Post Office upon its completion.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-10-19

Creator(s)

Payne, Henry C. (Henry Clay), 1843-1904

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Holmes Conrad was distressed to find out that Thomas W. Gilmer, who was connected to the report on Seymour Wilcox Tulloch, was involved in litigation between the comptroller’s office and the Interstate Commerce Commission in which Conrad represented the commission. Charles J. Bonaparte does not believe that this fact would have had any impact on their report’s conclusions and is confident that President Roosevelt understands the situation.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-10-09

Creator(s)

Bonaparte, Charles J. (Charles Joseph), 1851-1921

Telephone messages from Henry C. Payne

Telephone messages from Henry C. Payne

The case President Roosevelt mentioned to Postmaster General Payne went before the district attorney and he declined to put the case before a grand jury. Payne does not believe that anything else can be done in the matter. A later note states that Roosevelt wants the matter laid before Attorney General Philander C. Knox.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-10-05

Creator(s)

Unknown

Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Postmaster General Payne realizes that President Roosevelt has received reports regarding the investigation of the offices of the First Assistant Postmaster General in Washington, D.C., and Baltimore. Payne will submit a full report very soon. He is also optimistic about the investigation in the New York office and trusts that the grand jury will hand down indictments soon.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-09-18

Creator(s)

Payne, Henry C. (Henry Clay), 1843-1904

Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry C. Payne to Theodore Roosevelt

Postmaster General Payne informs President Roosevelt that he has provided a copy of a letter from George E. Green to Assistant Postmaster General Joseph L. Bristow. Payne has also prepared copies for investigators Charles J. Bonaparte and Holmes Conrad, but he notes that Bonaparte and Conrad are away on vacation, and they will surely wish to devote sufficient time to reviewing the relevant documents, thereby delaying their report. Unless instructed otherwise, however, Payne will ensure they receive the letter on their return.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-08-15

Creator(s)

Payne, Henry C. (Henry Clay), 1843-1904

President and partisans

President and partisans

This newspaper article discusses President Roosevelt’s investigation of charges against Comptroller Robert J. Tracewell. Roosevelt’s decision to appoint “two mugwumps” has been faced with some criticism, but the administration thinks that country will appreciate getting the matter out in the open. The article also comments on some of the findings by Bonaparte, who is one of the investigators in question looking into the Post Office affair.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-10-19

Creator(s)

Unknown

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Charles J. Bonaparte informs President Roosevelt that he has sought copies of the files about Seymour Wilcox Tulloch’s charges against the postal administration; he and Holmes Conrad will report to Roosevelt about it as soon as possible. Per a conversation with Darwin R. James of the Board of Indian Commissioners, Bonaparte shares that Secretary of the Interior Ethan Allen Hitchcock “finally consented” to publish unchanged a report from the Board, and Bonaparte has urged James to ask Roosevelt that these reports always be printed as their “subjection to a censorship” by the Interior Department is “more objectionable than their entire suppression.” Bonaparte also reports that Hitchcock refused, as was the custom, to publish with the Board’s report the proceedings of the last “Mohawk Conference of the Friends of the Indian,” a decision Bonaparte finds regrettable as the precedent is clear, the expense negligible, and the discussions of the Conference considerable. He feels the incident will place the Department in “a position of needless antagonism.” Bonaparte concludes by noting the enclosure of his letter to Archbishop P. J. Ryan of Philadelphia regarding the withdrawal of rations the previous autumn from Native American children attending religious schools. Bonaparte will try to obtain a copy of a pamphlet circulated among Catholics on this subject.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-07-22

Creator(s)

Bonaparte, Charles J. (Charles Joseph), 1851-1921

Letter from Henry Cabot Lodge to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry Cabot Lodge to Theodore Roosevelt

Senator Lodge writes to President Roosevelt about a variety of subjects, appointments, issues within the Republican Party. Lodge encloses a letter from Lucius Tuttle, President of the Boston and Maine Railroad, expressing concern about the appointment of someone new by Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw to handle transportation matters.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-06-27

Creator(s)

Lodge, Henry Cabot, 1850-1924

Letter from William C. LeGendre to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from William C. LeGendre to Theodore Roosevelt

William C. LeGendre read an article by William Nivison Wilmer about potential presidential candidates and he concluded in favor of President Roosevelt’s candidacy. However, Wilmer had issues with the pension question and LeGendre suggested to him that Roosevelt’s record shows that he would be capable of starting an investigation of the pension issue.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1901-10-07

Creator(s)

LeGendre, William C., 1856-1926