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Letter from John O’Hara Cosgrave to William Loeb

Letter from John O’Hara Cosgrave to William Loeb

John O’Hara Cosgrave notes that nothing was said about pay for President Roosevelt’s article on Nature Fakers and believes that it was intended as a contribution to the controversy. However, Everybody’s Magazine is left in the president’s debt and Cosgrave inquires whether Roosevelt would allow them to send him some books and looks to William Loeb for guidance.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-09-18

Letter from Caspar Whitney to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Caspar Whitney to Theodore Roosevelt

Caspar Whitney informs President Roosevelt that he had received four letters where people had made fun of him for taking up “cudgels for Roosevelt” although Whitney was not included in the roll of honor in the September issue of Everybody’s magazine. Whitney tells Roosevelt that his “interest in life is not to be reckoned on rolls of honor,” but the letters have made him wonder if the absence of his name from the rolls meant more than he originally thought. Whitney would like to know where he stands with the president.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-09-07

Letter from Henry Cabot Lodge to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry Cabot Lodge to Theodore Roosevelt

Senator Lodge writes to President Roosevelt about a speech made by Eben S. Draper, Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts and owner of a business that manufactured textile processing machinery, that might have been misreported to Roosevelt. Lodge assures Roosevelt that Draper did not attack him in the speech and that the newspapers have mischaracterized it. He also lets Roosevelt know that there has been no change in the condition of his sister-in-law; the doctors have already given up on her but she is still “hanging on the edge”.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-04-08

Letter from Edward B. Clark to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Edward B. Clark to Theodore Roosevelt

Journalist Edward B. Clark forwards to President Roosevelt a copy of naturalist William J. Long’s book Northern Trails. Clark would like Roosevelt’s estimate of the accuracy of Long’s portrayal of the “white wolf tale.” He apologizes for having taken up so much of Roosevelt’s time already. Clark promises to send Roosevelt the magazine article after it is written.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-02-06

Letter from Lawrence F. Abbott to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Lawrence F. Abbott to Theodore Roosevelt

Lawrence F. Abbott asks President Roosevelt to review upcoming articles for the Outlook that celebrate the birthday of General Robert E. Lee. Abbott hopes Roosevelt will write something for the magazine on Lee and also discusses the seemingly new unity of the country based on northerners of abolitionist ancestry celebrating the Confederate general. Abbott also includes a handwritten postscript specifying the deadline if Roosevelt did wish to contribute materials.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1906-12-11

Letter from Robert Bridges to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Robert Bridges to Theodore Roosevelt

Robert Bridges from Charles Scribner’s Sons sends President Roosevelt a check in payment for the serialization of two articles. Bridges also sends magazine proofs and will send a sample of a book manuscript in a few days. He asks Roosevelt who should be credited concerning illustrations and photographs. Bridges also congratulates the president on his speech at Harvard which was a “great delight.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1905-06-29

Letter from Henry S. Pritchett and James Ford Rhodes to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Henry S. Pritchett and James Ford Rhodes  to Theodore Roosevelt

Henry S. Pritchett, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, writes to President Roosevelt about “the Negro question.” Pritchett claims that Republican Reconstruction was a failure, and argues that the federal government should stop trying to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, since legislative threats are not making the Southern states comply. He recommends that the Southern states be allowed to control their own voting laws, subject only to outside criticism without force. Pritchett admits the Southern states will immediately disenfranchise most African Americans, but that this will be fair since they will also disenfranchise ignorant whites. He believes Roosevelt will still be allowed to make some African American appointments pending approval of local white leaders. Pritchett encloses an article he wrote on the subject and pages from James Ford Rhodes’s history. Rhodes, a historian specializing in Reconstruction, adds a postscript to Pritchett’s letter saying he agrees with Pritchett’s recommendations and will discuss with Pritchett conversations he had previously on the subject with Roosevelt.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-12-06