Letter from William Loeb to Universal Express Company
William Loeb encloses President Roosevelt’s check paying for the charges on a case from Hamburg containing a book.
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1908-09-03
Your TR Source
William Loeb encloses President Roosevelt’s check paying for the charges on a case from Hamburg containing a book.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1908-09-03
Felix Kraemer has enclosed a letter of introduction from the Vienna Male Chorus Society, who will be performing at the White House on May 6. He requests that all the singers and their families could bypass quarantine restrictions since their transport from Hamburg, the Oceana, was personally chartered by the society and no one else travelled with them. Kraemer hopes William Loeb will “drop him a line” about when he can receive him.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1907-03-31
President Roosevelt thanks Rachel Sherman Thorndike for the letter, and has tried to investigate the matter regarding Alexander M. Thackara. He discusses his thoughts regarding the appointment and promotion of people at American consulates, and promises that he will try to help Thackara, although he must also consider other candidates who are highly qualified for promotion.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-01-10
Major McIntyre has heard from General Clarence Ransom Edwards that Secretary of War William H. Taft and his traveling party are well and will arrive in Moscow by Saturday. Additionally, McIntyre states that there has been no change in travel plans.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1907-11-26
Hermann Speck von Sternburg encloses a letter for President Roosevelt.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-08-25
Hermann Speck von Sternburg encloses a letter for President Roosevelt.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-08-21
This article is the platform adopted by the Republican Party of Michigan ahead of the Republican National Convention. The topics mentioned include foreign trade, monetary and fiscal policies, the state electoral process, and Theodore Roosevelt’s candidacy.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1904-05-25
Text of German legislation related to the tonnage dues, tonnage taxes, and other tariffs at Hamburg and Bremen, Germany.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1901
Herbert H. D. Peirce reports on specific conditions of United States consulates in England, France, Holland, and Germany. Peirce assesses the performance of the consuls general in these locations and suggests salary changes, reassignments, and suppression of ineffective consulates. Peirce focuses extensively on allegations of corruption and infidelity against Consul General Oliver J. D. Hughes of Coburg, Germany, and allegations of scandal surrounding Clergyman G. Monroe Royce and Consul General James H. Worman in Munich, Germany.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1903-11-17