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Postal service--Employees

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Letter from Bernard S. Brown to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Bernard S. Brown to Theodore Roosevelt

Bernard S. Brown asks Theodore Roosevelt to help secure steady employment for a young man, Joseph V. Higgins, who is trying to take care of his large family after his father was taken to the Wards Island Asylum for the Insane. Higgins is part of the Twenty Second Regiment of Engineers and has passed his civil service examination. Brown and Roosevelt have never met, but their mothers were friends.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1911-12-18

More rough riding

More rough riding

President Roosevelt as a “Rough Rider” carries a pike labeled “Fearlessness” and rides an elephant labeled “Administration.” He has chased many men labeled “Dishonest Official” and “Corruption” from the “Post Office” Department. There are mail bags labeled “Corruption, Scandal, [and] Bribery” and letters labeled “Bribe, Scandal, [and] Bribery” flying in the rush of wind as corrupt officials flee Roosevelt and the rampaging elephant.

comments and context

Comments and Context

When Theodore Roosevelt became president, there were few Americans in or out of his Republican Party, or the nation as a whole, who thought that he would mend his ways as a reformer. Reform was an aspect of every position he held, from the New York Assembly, to party councils beginning with the 1884 presidential convention, to “civilizing” efforts in the Western prairies, to the national Civil Service Commission, to the New York City Police Department, to the Department of the Navy and the War Department around the Spanish-American War, to the Governor’s office in Albany. The Republican Old Guard famous feared his approach to the presidency in the case of William McKinley’s death (“Don’t you realize,” cried Senator Mark Hanna, “there’s only one bullet between that madman and the president of the United States?”) — and scarcely were assured when McKinley was assassinated, by Roosevelt’s promise to “continue, absolutely unbroken, the policies of the [McKinley] administration.

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Boies Penrose

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Boies Penrose

President Roosevelt informs Senator Penrose that he is unable to excuse Jacob G. Bunn, a financial clerk in the Philadelphia post office who made illegal political assessments. Roosevelt rejects the argument of ignorance of the law put forth by Bunn and the post office on multiple occasions. He has no alternative but to remove Bunn from office.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-10-28

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to George von Lengerke Meyer

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to George von Lengerke Meyer

President Roosevelt instructs Postmaster General Meyer to directly communicate with Ernest S. Simpson, editor of the San Francisco Call, and inform him why it is necessary to keep Thomas J. Ford in his position as superintendent of mail. Arthur G. Fisk, Postmaster of San Francisco, has been against the administration. Should the administration have to decide against Ford, Roosevelt wants their position to be “just as clear as a bell,” and Simpson should have the whole story.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-04-27

Letter from Benjamin F. Barnes to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Benjamin F. Barnes to Theodore Roosevelt

Postmaster Barnes, of Washington, D.C., has been told by an informant that Senator Joseph Benson Foraker intends to bring to the Senate affidavits from postal employees, alleging a conspiracy in the Washington post office. Foraker asserts that there was a conspiracy to spy on the mail of men in public life. While Barnes does not think that such a conspiracy exists, he informs President Roosevelt of events in the post office which may be related. Following the dismissal of a superintendent of delivery, the number of complaints against the post office increased until it was announced that his replacement would be removed. Barnes believes that the dismissed superintendent conspired with others to slow the mail.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-11-11

Letter from William R. Willcox to William Loeb

Letter from William R. Willcox to William Loeb

New York City Postmaster William R. Willcox writes William Loeb regarding the incident of a person of color, postal clerk A. D. Guerrant, being fired for insubordination. Willcox disagrees with the letter Congressman Herbert Parsons sent to President Theodore Roosevelt alleging that Guerrant had been the victim of racial discrimination. Willcox outlines the case, defends the decisions of the other department managers, and denies strongly the accusation that the New York Post Office discriminates or makes hiring or promotion decisions based on anything but merit.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1906-09-05

Letter from F. Norton Goddard to William Loeb

Letter from F. Norton Goddard to William Loeb

F. Norton Goddard believes that the postal clerks have not supported the Republican ticket because they dislike Postmaster Van Cott. He describes several situations where Van Cott has engaged in corrupt practices. Goddard encloses a letter from Michael Hines which discusses how Hines has been treated poorly by Van Cott.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-08-10

Executive indiscretion

Executive indiscretion

The article criticizes President Roosevelt’s conduct regarding the trial of several post office employees accused of corruption and misconduct. Roosevelt condemned them in a special message to Congress before they had been tried, which may have influenced the jury towards a guilty verdict.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-03-02