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Presidents--Religious life

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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to W. R. McCormack

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to W. R. McCormack

W. R. McCormack is “entirely right” in his opinion about William H. Taft. President Roosevelt encloses a copy of a letter that Bishop Joseph C. Hartzell has written, which can be made public. Roosevelt also encloses a letter, which he would like to remain private, that he is going to send to a man who is against Taft and which required an expression of Roosevelt’s opinion about Taft’s religious views.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-10-18

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Henry Yates Satterlee

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Henry Yates Satterlee

President Roosevelt recommends that the Right Reverend Yates not attend a particular service during the political campaign. Recently, Roosevelt’s minister preached a sermon on peace, and Democratic newspapers misconstrued the sermon as an attack on the President. Roosevelt believes that they would be likely to use the same tactic again. Roosevelt will confine himself to his own ordinary church services until after the election when “our opponents return to the ordinary customs of morality and decency.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1904-09-16

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919

Letter from Francis J. Heney to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Francis J. Heney to Theodore Roosevelt

Francis J. Heney meant to write to President Roosevelt several weeks ago to congratulate him on his letter about religious opposition to the election of president-elect William H. Taft. Heney believes it will be useful for years to come. He is still recovering from the gunshot wound he received to his jaw, but his speech has not been impaired and he does not have any scars from the experience. Heney would like to complete the trial he was working on, but his doctors have advised him not to return to work yet. The telegram Roosevelt sent to Heney’s wife, Rebecca W. Heney, helped her through a difficult time, and Heney deeply appreciates it.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-12-04

Creator(s)

Heney, Francis J. (Francis Joseph), 1859-1937

Book reviews

Book reviews

Seven books are reviewed and one title receives attention because of its reissue in this crowded edition of the “Book Reviews” section. John A. Gable, editor of the Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal, reviews three works, including an evaluation of Theodore Roosevelt as a politician, a biography of Roosevelt, and a historical novel. Gable likes David H. Burton’s Theodore Roosevelt, American Politician though he disagrees with some of Burton’s analysis, but he is less enthusiastic about H.W. Brands’s T.R.: The Last Romantic, partly because he faults Brands for never properly defining what he means by “romantic.” Gable praises The Angel of Darkness, Caleb Carr’s sequel to his very popular The Alienist, because both “successfully teach readers about various aspects of American life a century ago.” 

 

Henry J. Hendrix finds that in Theodore Roosevelt and the British Empire, William N. Tilchin provides a plethora of evidence to support his thesis that Roosevelt wanted to forge a closer relationship with Great Britain. Michael L. Manson commends the many illustrations used to populate Ron Ziel’s pictorial history of the Spanish-American War, Birth of the American Century. In a brief review, Elizabeth E. Roosevelt says that William T. Hagan’s Theodore Roosevelt and Six Friends of the Indian shows how a range of personalities tried to influence Roosevelt’s stance on Native Americans as both Civil Service Commissioner and President. Gregory A. Wynn criticizes George Grant for trying to pigeonhole Roosevelt as a Christian conservative in his Carry a Big Stick, and he says that the book’s factual errors and exaggerations make it of little value to Roosevelt scholars. 

 

“Book Reviews” notes that William H. Harbaugh’s Power and Responsibility: The Life and Times of Theodore Roosevelt, “the best one-volume complete biography,” has been reissued in a new hardcover edition. A photograph of Gable and Carr and two photographs of Roosevelt with members of the Rough Riders appear in the section.

The religion of Theodore Roosevelt

The religion of Theodore Roosevelt

Robert Bolt examines Theodore Roosevelt’s religious life and details some of Roosevelt’s beliefs by quoting extensively from his writings. Bolt contends that Roosevelt believed in a Christianity that emphasized service and works over dogma, rules, and regulations. He asserts that Roosevelt looked to the Bible, especially the King James version, for guidance, and that Roosevelt felt that people should attend a church. Bolt argues that Roosevelt believed that morality was necessary to the functioning of a republic, and he felt that the nation’s foreign policy should emphasize achieving justice and righteousness over maintaining peace.

A photograph of Roosevelt in a dynamic speaking pose appears on the last page of the article.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Creation Date

1993

Theodore Roosevelt: Dutch Reformed Stalwart in the White House

Theodore Roosevelt: Dutch Reformed Stalwart in the White House

Robert Bolt discusses Theodore Roosevelt’s religious life and notes that Roosevelt remained committed to the Dutch Reformed Church throughout his life despite his father’s ties to the Presbyterian Church and his wife’s membership in the Episcopal Church. Bolt also examines some of Roosevelt’s other religious beliefs and practices, such as his adherence to regular Sunday church attendance, reading the Bible, and doing good works.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal

Creation Date

1991

Creator(s)

Bolt, Robert, 1930-2020

Theodore Roosevelt’s religion

Theodore Roosevelt’s religion

Hermann Hagedorn uses quotes from various friends, family, and colleagues of Theodore Roosevelt to demonstrate that he had an active Christian faith that he nurtured with Bible study and regular church attendance. He employs these quotations to counter the argument that Roosevelt was not a Christian and because Roosevelt himself seldom spoke openly about his faith.

 

Reverend George E. Talmadge, the Rector of Christ Church in Oyster Bay, New York, provides a view of Theodore Roosevelt the parishioner. He provides a number of anecdotes about Roosevelt’s participation in Sunday services and his support of church ministries. Talmadge discusses Roosevelt’s religious roots in the Dutch Reformed Church, his work with the Boy Scouts, and the death of Quentin Roosevelt.

 

A picture of Christ Church in Oyster Bay, New York accompanies the Talmadge article.