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Phillips, W. Hallett (William Hallett), 1853-1897

6 Results

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William H. Taft

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William H. Taft

Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt regrets to inform Judge William H. Taft of W. Hallett Phillips’s death due to drowning after being knocked into the water by the yacht’s boom. Anna Cabot Mills Davis Lodge is deeply affected by Phillips’s death, and Roosevelt dreads informing Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt. Phillips was a kindly soul who did not think of himself.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1897-05-10

Letter from Paul Joseph Dashiell to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Paul Joseph Dashiell to Theodore Roosevelt

Paul Joseph Dashiell sends Theodore Roosevelt a pouch of “larb,” which Native Americans sometimes smoke in place of tobacco. He says that mixed with tobacco, it tastes and smells like campfire smoke. The pouch used to belong to W. Hallett Phillips. Dashiell thinks that Roosevelt will appreciate the pouch, because he appreciates the West.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1911-07-14

A chapter in the history of the American conservation movement: Land, Trees, and Water, 1890-1915

A chapter in the history of the American conservation movement: Land, Trees, and Water, 1890-1915

In this chapter excerpt from his book John Muir and His Legacy: The American Conservation Movement, Stephen Fox examines efforts to expand Yosemite National Park, the battle between preservationists and conservationists over the use of forests, and provides portraits of John Muir, Gifford Pinchot, John Burroughs, and Theodore Roosevelt. He looks at the work undertaken by the conservation movement to preserve Niagara Falls, the redwood forests of California, and Mount Desert Island in Maine. Fox concludes the chapter with a look at the battle over the city of San Francisco’s desire to build a dam at the southern end of Hetch Hetchy valley in Yosemite National Park. In addition to looking at the life and work of Muir, the chapter provides information on many lesser known figures in the turn of the twentieth-century conservation movement.

A listing of the officers and the members of the executive, finance, and Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace committees of the Theodore Roosevelt Association is found on the second page of the excerpt.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal