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Journalists--Political and social views

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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Julius Chambers

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Julius Chambers

Theodore and Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt enjoyed Julius Chambers’s article in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle on Roosevelt’s speech. Theodore Roosevelt feels that the New York papers are hypocritical; they condemn him for criticizing Woodrow Wilson, but the same papers had no problem denouncing Roosevelt when he was president. Roosevelt notes that he never expected to be blindly supported or not criticized while he was president.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1915-08-31

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919

Letter from James Jeffrey Roche to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from James Jeffrey Roche to Theodore Roosevelt

James Jeffrey Roche discusses his editorial titled “Lest We Forget,” which was based on a case in which President Roosevelt “intervened to check a gross injustice towards a Mr. Raleigh.” Roche notes that he would always like to present Roosevelt as impartial. Roche will not be able to accept Roosevelt’s invitation for medical reasons.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-08-11

Creator(s)

Roche, James Jeffrey, 1847-1908

Book notes

Book notes

Seven books, including two memoirs, are examined in six review essays in this edition of the “Book Notes” section. Michael L. Manson reviews two books on Theodore Roosevelt’s 1914 scientific expedition to Brazil; one penned by Roosevelt and the other by Joseph R. Ornig. Manson praises the forewords to both books written by Tweed Roosevelt, and he finds Ornig’s book provides a detailed look at the expedition and the cast of characters besides Roosevelt who made it successful. Stacy A. Cordery notes that journalist Joseph Alsop’s memoirs deal mostly with the major events and figures of the mid to late twentieth century, and she reveals Alsop’s opinions of various senators, presidents, and generals.

Richard P. Harmon faults Peter Collier’s The Roosevelts: An American Saga for focusing too much on the private lives of the two Roosevelt families, and he says that many of Collier’s assertions are not backed by evidence and that the book relies too much on a psychohistory approach. James Summerville asserts that H. Paul Jeffers’s look at Roosevelt’s tenure as Police Commissioner of New York City, Commissioner Roosevelt, disappoints and that readers should turn to Jay S. Berman’s study or to coverage of this period of Roosevelt’s career in biographies. John A. Gable provides a positive and short review of a short book, William H. Harbaugh’s fifty page history of Pine Knot, which Gable says is written with “charm and style.” Robert D. Dalziel, President of the Theodore Roosevelt Association (TRA), reviews the memoirs of Hamilton Fish, a winner of the TRA’s Distinguished Service Medal. Dalziel says that Fish’s opinions are straightforward and blunt like their author.

Two photographs appear in the section: one shows three members of the Rio Roosevelt Expedition of 1992 and the other dignitaries of the Dutch government at the Roosevelt Study Center in the Netherlands.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Letter from Harold Irwin Cleveland to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Harold Irwin Cleveland to Theodore Roosevelt

Harold Irwin Cleveland congratulates President Roosevelt on his time in office. He thinks the West is still shocked about the appointment of Postmaster Henry C. Payne, but trusts that Roosevelt’s choice is right. He shares that Paul Morton is pleased with Roosevelt’s take on irrigation, and George Ogden is also regularly saying good things. Jack Raftery, now at the St. Louis Exposition, is still loyal. Cleveland hears that Roosevelt is “shaking the dry bones up in fine style”, but also hears that Secretary Lyman J. Gage and Secretary Wilson behave quite anxiously. He feels that Roosevelt will go forth in courage and honesty.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-12-20

Creator(s)

Cleveland, Harold Irwin

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt

Letter of introduction for John T. McCutcheon, cartoonist and writer for the Chicago Tribune. Theodore Roosevelt and McCutcheon have similar views regarding the war, the United States’ involvement, and the needs of the French. Roosevelt will include McCutcheon in the cavalry division he hopes to raise if the United States enters the war.

Collection

Newberry Library

Creation Date

1915-08-05

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919