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Letter from William Kent to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from William Kent to Theodore Roosevelt

William Kent discusses his beliefs on the Japanese racial issue in California and sends President Roosevelt an editorial from California Weekly. Kent compares what is happening on the Hawaiian islands to California and is glad that California is not being settled as rapidly as other parts of the country. Kent believes that in matters of Japanese immigrants “distance will best sanctify our traditional friendship for each other.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1909-01-29

Letter from Arthur Hamilton Lee to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Arthur Hamilton Lee to Theodore Roosevelt

Arthur Hamilton Lee remarks that President Roosevelt’s speech about the English in India came at a critical time for England’s Indian policy and would like a copy of the speech. There have been “agitators” slandering England’s Indian policy. Lee requests Roosevelt’s opinion on Britain’s Two Power Standard of Naval Strength as it applies to excluding the United States. As a distant observer, Lee has been following Roosevelt’s conflict with Congress and believes that the Times correspondents have done “a world of good” with their “excellent dispatches” keeping Roosevelt’s viewpoint before the public. Lee looks forward to Roosevelt’s visit after his trip to Africa. 

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1909-01-29

Letter from Elihu Root to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Elihu Root to Theodore Roosevelt

Assistant Secretary of State Robert Bacon has informed Secretary of State Root that James E. Sullivan was made an official representative of the United States at the Olympics because of Caspar Whitney’s appeal to President Roosevelt. This could potentially put the United States into the difficult position of either apologizing to England or justifying Sullivan’s “undoubted misbehavior.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11

Letter from Winthrop Chanler to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Winthrop Chanler to Theodore Roosevelt

Winthrop Chanler sends President Roosevelt a silk sash as a gift and teases him about the upcoming African safari. Chanler will travel to Europe soon. He briefly mentions what his family, who are already there, have been doing. He also congratulates Roosevelt on his twenty-second wedding anniversary. Chanler’s is coming up soon as well.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-12-02

Letter from John St. Loe Strachey to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from John St. Loe Strachey to Theodore Roosevelt

John St. Loe Strachey is pleased that President Roosevelt liked his “little book,” and agrees with Roosevelt’s assessment that he should have applied Proverbs 29:12 to the people as well as rulers. He congratulates Roosevelt on president-elect William H. Taft’s victory. He also hopes that when Roosevelt is in England following the Romanes Lecture, he and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt will have time to spend a weekend at his house in Surrey.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-17

Letter from John Callan O’Laughlin to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from John Callan O’Laughlin to Theodore Roosevelt

John Callan O’Laughlin reports to President Roosevelt on his recently-finished trip to Japan. In particular, he recounted conversations with Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs Komura Jutarō and Russian military attache W. K. Samoiloff. Japan intends to declare Manchuria a “zone of special interest.” O’Laughlin’s overall impression is that, while Roosevelt’s and Secretary of State Elihu Root’s efforts to improve relations with Japan have helped, Japan, and not China, represents the United States’s biggest problems in the region. O’Laughlin summarizes twelve conclusions from his trip about the current state of international relations with Japan.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-20

Letter from Sydney Brooks to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Sydney Brooks to Theodore Roosevelt

Sydney Brooks tells President Roosevelt how happy he, and others in England, are with the election of William H. Taft. The constitutionalists in England were “scandalized” by Roosevelt’s involvement in the campaign. Brooks has been spreading stories about Taft’s character in England, and the feeling toward him now is warm. He praises Roosevelt’s accomplishments in office and offers suggestions for the topic of his 1910 Romanes lecture. Finally, Brooks discusses the unfavorable view in the American press of British rule in India.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-11

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt

Ambassador Reid writes to Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt a “letter of indiscretions” about English society life and the state of affairs in Europe. First, he reflects upon the precarious and sad position of the German Emperor William II, who keeps making blunders and “plunging from one extravagance to another” in hopes of making people forget about his last mistake by making new ones. Reid fears that some mistakes, like his asking France to apologize for a matter when he had already agreed to arbitration, could lead to war in Europe. Reid also updates Roosevelt about Walter Spencer Morgan Burns’s drinking problem, and the controversy surrounding the separation of the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, Charles Richard John Spencer-Churchill and Consuelo Vanderbilt Spencer-Churchill. King Edward VII has banned the Marlboroughs from Court until they live together again, but the Duchess is refusing to reconcile. Mrs. Reid’s private secretary, Helen Rogers, is recovering from surgery to remove her appendix. Reid has discussed having an American or Anglo-American Exhibition in a year or two, at the White City in Chicago. Mrs. Reid will be sailing in December to visit her father, but Reid cannot go because the State Department issued a circular instructing all Ambassadors to remain at their posts and not take further leaves of absence.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-12

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Ambassador Reid has discussed President Roosevelt’s upcoming trip to Africa with Robert Offley Ashburton Crewe-Milnes, and reports that the issue regarding permits to enter game reserves has been resolved. The licenses will be taken care of. Crewe-Milnes assured Reid that Roosevelt’s needs will be taken care of, but that the British government understands that he does not want a fuss. Reid also discusses a number of domestic political issues in England, as well as the state of international affairs in Europe. He thinks that in spite of rumors in the British press about southwestern Europe, a war is unlikely. Reid encloses a caricature of Roosevelt that he thinks he will find amusing.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-03

Letter from James Deitrick to William Loeb

Letter from James Deitrick to William Loeb

James Deitrick has been in England on business and informs William Loeb of the state of affairs in the manufacturing district. People are starving, and manufacturing interests have been secretly sending funds to the Democratic National Committee in hopes of electing William Jennings Bryan, who they believe will support free trade.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-10-10

Letter from John Callan O’Laughlin to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from John Callan O’Laughlin to Theodore Roosevelt

John Callan O’Laughlin informs President Roosevelt that the Japanese government has had a change of heart regarding the agreement between the United States and Japan which was proposed last fall. They would now like to enter into the agreement, which would give assurances that the Japanese would honor United States sovereignty over its Pacific possessions. Regarding a treaty that will end in 1912, O’Laughlin notes that the Japanese would like revisions regarding Japanese immigration to the United States. The Japanese are also thinking about annexing Korea.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-10-11

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Whitelaw Reid, Ambassador to the United Kingdom, updates President Roosevelt on King of Britain Edward VII’s respectful behavior toward Sultan of the Turks Abdülhamid II. Turkey has embraced British Ambassador Sir Gerard Lowther, who has ended up in a position of power mostly by luck. The German Emperor William II has been recklessly deepening the financial troubles that plague Berlin. Reid does not think Roosevelt will need his Colonel’s uniform for visiting England, and details the appropriate attire. He discusses an agreement made with Chairman of the Republican National Committee Frank H. Hitchcock to send copies of the Daily Tribune to voters in New York. Lord Robert Offley Ashburton Crewe-Milnes has been unavailable due to travel, but Reid should have more information when the next session begins in three weeks.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-09-23

Letter from Arthur Hamilton Lee to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Arthur Hamilton Lee to Theodore Roosevelt

Arthur Hamilton Lee appreciates the friendly letters from President Roosevelt and asks that Roosevelt and his family leave ample time for their visit to England. It is unfortunate that Roosevelt will not be present for the deer-stalking. Lee is pleased Roosevelt will deliver the Romanes lecture at Oxford. The outcome of the election has seemed unclear from abroad, and Lee is glad to hear Roosevelt’s positive update on William H. Taft. Lee asks if Roosevelt will elaborate on statements from his letters about information that he wants to share in person. If the information could assist Lee in serving his country and there was no other way to discuss it, he would come to the United States, but he assures Roosevelt that a message could be transmitted safely through the embassy.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-10-04

Letter from Lincoln Steffens to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Lincoln Steffens to Theodore Roosevelt

Lincoln Steffens apologizes for his slow reply to President Roosevelt, as the previous letter came in the middle of the Republican National Convention. Steffens thinks that if it is necessary to reach socialism, so be it, but his hope is that it is possible to save democracy by getting rid of some of the greater privileges of government, such as those of private owners of public utilities, that drive corruption such as Tammany Hall. Steffens thinks that if they could get rid of some of the biggest sources of corruption, it would become much easier to deal with the smaller ones. He congratulates Roosevelt for driving a progressive agenda at the Republican National Convention.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-06-20

Letter from John St. Loe Strachey to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from John St. Loe Strachey to Theodore Roosevelt

John St. Loe Strachey thanks President Roosevelt for sending him the two books, which he will read when he is able to. Strachey also congratulates Roosevelt on the nomination of Secretary of War William H. Taft to be the Republican candidate for President. The journalist Edward Dicey is not someone who has very much influence, or who Strachey thinks very highly of. Strachey hopes that Roosevelt might be able to visit England on his way to his African safari. He also thanks Roosevelt for letting him see the letter that Roosevelt wrote to Lincoln Steffens.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-06-22

Letter from J. J. Jusserand to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from J. J. Jusserand to Theodore Roosevelt

French Ambassador Jusserand complains to President Roosevelt about French vinegar being held up at customs by the Department of Agriculture due to problems with their labels, even after several revisions of them, which Jusserand feels is unreasonable. The issue of products being held up in customs is not only limited to vinegar, but also extends to several other products.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-05-31

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Whitelaw Reid to Theodore Roosevelt

Ambassador Reid writes President Roosevelt about a number of issues, both political and social. He adds more information about Lord Edward Marjoribanks Tweedmouth’s mental breakdown and discusses the man who will replace him. Reid also relays an indignant letter he got from Clarise S. Ramsay, an American who wrongly felt she should have been invited to a royal ball. Roosevelt’s plan to go on a safari in Africa after leaving office is, Reid thinks, a very good one, and Roosevelt should not need to worry about receiving proper treatment and courtesies from British officials there. On a personal note, Reid thanks Roosevelt for his kind wishes at the news of his daughter Jean’s engagement to John H. Ward. He discusses his future son-in-law and the couple’s plans following their marriage.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-06-04