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Osborn, Frederick Sturges, 1859-1875

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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Lucretia Thatcher Perry Osborn

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Lucretia Thatcher Perry Osborn

Theodore Roosevelt apologizes for missing Lucretia Thatcher Perry Osborn’s previous letter and the dinner invitation. Roosevelt is not able to make a speech before the New York Zoological Society, similar to that which he gave for the American Museum of Natural History. If he speaks again in New York, it must be for the unemployed.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1914-12-19

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919

The determined independent study of a young naturalist: Theodore Roosevelt, 1874-1875

The determined independent study of a young naturalist: Theodore Roosevelt, 1874-1875

Margaret P. Griffin chronicles the evolution of Theodore Roosevelt as a naturalist in the years 1874 and 1875. She highlights the creation of a “Natural History Society” composed of Roosevelt and several of his friends who shared nature observations, read papers, and organized outings. Griffin focuses on Roosevelt’s avid interest in ornithology, and she provides excerpts from Roosevelt’s notebooks to demonstrate his detailed knowledge of different species. Griffin notes Roosevelt’s encounters with the now extinct passenger pigeon, and she details the death of Frederick Sturges Osborn, one of Roosevelt’s closest friends and fellow ornithologist. 

Seven photographs accompany the essay, including one of Roosevelt and another showing examples of his bird taxidermy. 

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Creation Date

2014

Theodore Roosevelt Disposes of His Boyhood Bird Specimens

Theodore Roosevelt Disposes of His Boyhood Bird Specimens

Paul Russell Cutright examines the donation of Theodore Roosevelt’s bird collection to the Smithsonian Institution and the American Museum of Natural History. Cutright focuses on the donation to the Smithsonian since it was very large, 622 bird skins, and he details how the collection was cataloged, where and to whom individual specimens were dispersed, and he highlights some of the more notable specimens like the Snowy owl.

Pictures of Theodore Roosevelt and his father and a copy of two pages of the accession records of the Smithsonian accompany the article. The cover of this issue features a picture of the Snowy owl shot, prepared, and donated to the American Museum of Natural History by Roosevelt.

A listing of the officers of the Theodore Roosevelt Association along with the members of its executive, finance, and Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace committees is on the second page of the article.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

The boyhood natural history notebooks of Theodore Roosevelt

The boyhood natural history notebooks of Theodore Roosevelt

Paul Russell Cutright examines the thirteen natural history notebooks that Theodore Roosevelt kept during his childhood and young adult years. He notes the dates, the subjects, and the locations of the observations kept in each notebook. Cutright focuses on Roosevelt’s love of birding and most of the notebook excerpts deal with this subject. He highlights Roosevelt’s skill at identifying birds by their calls and songs, notes his considerable observation skills, and credits various naturalists and friends who influenced Roosevelt.

Two photographs of Roosevelt as a child and young man and a full-page picture of a mounted snowy owl that Roosevelt prepared accompany the article.

A listing of the officers of the Theodore Roosevelt Association along with the members of the executive, finance, and Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace committees is on page two of the article.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal