Your TR Source

Rounds, Ruel, 1842-1922

3 Results

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Charles J. Bonaparte to Theodore Roosevelt

Attorney General Bonaparte updates President Roosevelt on Judge Frank Sigel Dietrich’s statements regarding Marshal Ruel Rounds, and on the situation in Idaho. Bonaparte thinks the lumber men could appeal to the Interstate Commerce Commission about the railroad rates, but he will have to look into the matter further. Many of the employees involved in the land fraud cases think highly of District Attorney N. M. Ruick and feel Senator William Edgar Borah is guilty, but the secret service men dislike Ruick. In Oklahoma, Bonaparte is still waiting for the election and the results of the census, and will give Roosevelt his feedback on the constitution after he has more information. William Randolph Hearst and the financiers have taken up rumors of Bonaparte’s resignation in the press again, perhaps because of Republican National Committee member Frank B. Kellogg’s visit to Roosevelt.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-09-01

Telegram from William Allen White to Theodore Roosevelt

Telegram from William Allen White to Theodore Roosevelt

William Allen White informs President Roosevelt that Judge Frank Sigel Deitrich is drawing his jury from U.S. Marshall Ruel Rounds’s list, which consists of men who will likely convict regardless of the presented evidence. White pleads with Roosevelt to remind Attorney General Charles J. Bonaparte of his assurance that Rounds would not select the jury.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-08-29

Note from Theodore Roosevelt to Charles J. Bonaparte

Note from Theodore Roosevelt to Charles J. Bonaparte

President Roosevelt directs Attorney General Bonaparte to telegraph the clerk of the United States Court in Idaho and ask for the decision of the court from the previous Saturday, which saw a ruling on a plea in abatement in the land fraud cases. Roosevelt says that if the verdict is what he understands it to be, then District Attorney N. M. Ruick and Marshal Ruel Rounds should be removed.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1908-03-16