Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Edward William Bok
Theodore Roosevelt sends Ladies Home Journal editor, Edward William Bok, his tenth article and writes that he enjoyed their recent lunch.
Collection
Creation Date
1917-01-09
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Theodore Roosevelt sends Ladies Home Journal editor, Edward William Bok, his tenth article and writes that he enjoyed their recent lunch.
1917-01-09
Theodore Roosevelt sends Ladies Home Journal editor, Edward William Bok, his eighth article and looks forward to their upcoming lunch.
1916-12-19
Theodore Roosevelt thanks Jose Custodio Alves de Lima for the coffee and machine and invites him to lunch at Sagamore Hill.
1916-07-20
Writing on behalf of Theodore Roosevelt, Frank Harper thanks Jose Custodio Alves de Lima for his letter and invites him to lunch at the Outlook office.
1913-06-25
Theodore Roosevelt gives Belle Roosevelt an update on the status of the family. Roosevelt has recently heard from his son Kermit Roosevelt. Major Potts recently joined the Roosevelts for dinner, along with several officers.
1917-09-16
Theodore Roosevelt informs his sister that he asked Clarence H. Mackay to sent a telegram, as she requested. However, he mentions that she should not worry if there is a delay, as he has experienced telegram delays even with Mackay. Roosevelt writes that he enjoyed Theodore Douglas Robinson’s children and mentions his lunch plans with Edith.
1918-09-19
Theodore Roosevelt asks his sister to send an enclosure to Monroe Douglas Robinson. He writes that he has asked himself to lunch with her and mentions that he had dinner with Frances Theodora Parsons recently.
1918-07-15
Theodore Roosevelt expresses concern over his sister’s eye problems and Douglas Robinson’s fall. He writes that Edgar Lee Masters visited and that Ethel Roosevelt has left. Roosevelt mentions a lunch with Theodore Douglas Roosevelt and John King.
1918-07-03
Theodore Roosevelt thanks his sister for her letter and enclosures. He informs her of his travel plans for the next month and makes plans to see her when he returns.
1918-05-23
Theodore Roosevelt asks his sister to read the enclosed letter to poet John Masefield and send it on to him. Roosevelt also inquires if she and Douglas Robinson would bring Masefield to Sagamore Hill to dine.
1918-05-10
Theodore Roosevelt thanks his sister for her letter and writes of his plans to go to Maine. Roosevelt makes dining plans for when he returns in two weeks.
1918-03-23
Theodore Roosevelt shares his thoughts on his sister’s poetry and inquires about dining plans during his upcoming visit.
1917-12-04
Theodore Roosevelt agrees to arrangements for a Bazaar and writes that he is coming to visit with Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt. He notes that he and Edith enjoyed his sister’s most recent poem and asks her to invite Frances Theodora Parsons to breakfast. Roosevelt mentions his admiration for Monroe Douglas Robinson and his wife, Dorothy.
1917-11-21
Theodore Roosevelt makes plans to visit with his sister and writes that he enjoyed their lunch.
1917-11-09
Theodore Roosevelt encloses a note to “Jones” and asks his sister to read it. Roosevelt tells her of issues in publishing and asks her to let him know the details of breakfast plans they had arranged.
1917-01-20
William H. Taft and others address New England Street Railways Club’s “Federal Night” dinner. Major topics included judicial review and anti-trust legislation.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1912-03-19
Protocol for dinner at the Congress Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, including how to greet Theodore Roosevelt and when to proceed to the reception following dinner.
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site
1912-06
Theodore Roosevelt has written Samuel Avery to request a meal with E. J. Burkett and apologizes to Burkett for the “mixup”.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1917-06-06
Theodore Roosevelt is pleased with James P. Goodrich’s letter, but will not be passing through Indiana in the near future and will be unable to see him. He congratulates Goodrich on his handling of affairs and invites him to dinner if he is ever in New York.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1917-06-05
President Roosevelt asks if Edgar Huidekoper Wells can stop in Washington for lunch or dinner on his way west.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1908-10-10