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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Kermit Roosevelt

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Kermit Roosevelt

President Roosevelt tells his son Kermit about the guests they have been entertaining, including poet Madison Julius Cawein and his wife. Roosevelt adds that he has read more poems by Edwin Arlington Robinson. Other visitors included Prince Louis of Battenberg and his nephew Prince Alexander, who attended a state dinner and sat next to Secretary of the Navy Charles J. Bonaparte.

Collection

Harvard College Library

Creation Date

1905-11-06

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919

Topics of the day – A brilliant idea

Topics of the day – A brilliant idea

The article discusses President Roosevelt’s address at the Jamestown Ter-centennial Exposition. America has risen as a nation through business and industry, rather than through military might, and thus is likely to last longer than other nations which have risen by the latter. Roosevelt traces the origins of the nation beyond the arrival of the Mayflower, all the way back to the dreams of Sir Walter Raleigh. The writer wonders what Raleigh might think of the second half of Roosevelt’s address, in which he expressed the problem of the danger of wealth – a common theme in the President’s speeches.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-04-27

Creator(s)

London Evening Standard

The outlook – Mr. Roosevelt discovers England

The outlook – Mr. Roosevelt discovers England

At the Jamestown Exposition, President Roosevelt spoke highly of England. Other Americans usually disregard England, but Roosevelt reminds his fellow Americans that the United States developed its intellectual origins out of English philosophy. However, the United States should watch out for the rich magnates and monopolies in the United States.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-04-27

Creator(s)

Unknown