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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Robert Grant

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Robert Grant

Theodore Roosevelt compliments Robert Grant on his recent publications and contrasts them to the works of other “intellectual leaders”. Roosevelt also expresses dissatisfaction with The Saturday Evening Post and The New Republic magazines.

Collection

Harvard College Library

Creation Date

1916-10-03

Letter from Jacob A. Riis to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Jacob A. Riis to Theodore Roosevelt

Jacob A. Riis thanks President Roosevelt for allowing him to inscribe a book. He will send another edition when he gets it. Riis hopes that President Roosevelt’s bear hunt is going well and requests a meeting for December to discuss some articles Riis might write. He has given up on writing a full life of Roosevelt.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1902-11-14

Letter from Mrs. Archibald Dixon to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Mrs. Archibald Dixon to Theodore Roosevelt

Mrs. Archibald Dixon is a supporter of President Roosevelt, but is of a different opinion on a few issues. She sent Roosevelt a magazine by George B. Cortelyou that included an article on Patrick Henry. She disagrees with Roosevelt’s assessment that Henry made “a slip” in opposing the Constitution without amendments. She also encourages him to leave the North-South issue in the hands of God.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1902-11-24

Letter from Jean N. Ingram to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Jean N. Ingram to Theodore Roosevelt

Jean N. Ingram sends Theodore Roosevelt his illustrated article on industrial New Zealand and urges him to plan a hunting trip there. He briefly describes the Maori people and the landscape. He discusses the ancient moa bird and the modern kea, “tigers on wings.” Ingram asks if The Outlook would be interested in an article on Australia.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1911-01-18

Letter from Thomas E. Watson to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Thomas E. Watson to Theodore Roosevelt

Vice presidential candidate Thomas E. Watson writes Police Commissioner Roosevelt regarding Roosevelt’s recent article in the Review of Reviews, which criticized Watson’s populist platform. Watson explains his position as tied into his advocacy for the poor, upon whom the burdens of government most often fall. He believes Roosevelt has misjudged him and asserts that if the two spent time together, Roosevelt would see that they have much in common.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1896-08-30