| Theodore
Roosevelt
26th President of the United States of America
(1858–1919)
Biographical
President of the United States of America
1901–09
Vice President of the United States of America 1901
Governor of New York 1899–1900
Assistant Secretary of the US Navy 1897–98
President of the New York City Police Board 1895
US Civil Service Commissioner 1889–94
Deputy Sheriff for Billings County, Dakota Territory, 1885
Member of the New York Delegation at the Republican Convention 1884
Republican minority leader 1883
Member of the New York State Assembly 1882–85
Lieutenant-colonel of the Roosevelt’s Rough Riders (cavalry regiment)
in the Spanish-American War 1898
Nobel Peace Prize 1906
During early life, Theodore Roosevelt was frail, but succeeded in building
up a strong physical constitution by exercise and open air life. After
graduation, he engaged in the study of law, but abandoned the pursuit
to become a member of the New York State Legislature in 1882, representing
the 21st Assembly District of New York. The key to his later attitude
as a reformer will be found in his indignation over the decision of the
Court of Appeals that a law he had fathered in favour of public health
by prohibiting the manufacture and the preparation of tobacco in tenement-houses
was declared unconstitutional. He was a delegate to the Republican National
Convention, 1884, and during the campaign supported James G. Blaine. From
1884 to 1886, he lived on a ranch in North Dakota, which gave the background
for his subsequent writings on life in the far west. In 1886, he was defeated
for the mayoralty of New York City by Abram F. Hewitt. Upon appointment
by President Benjamin Harrison, Roosevelt became a member of the United
States Civil Service Commission, serving from 1889 to 1895. Into this
work he threw great enthusiasm, and forced the question of civil service
reform upon Congress and the American people. He resigned in 1895 to become
President of the Board of Police Commissioners for the City of New York,
in which position he probably made himself more felt than any other official
in the history of the city. At the request of President McKinley in 1897
he resigned to become Assistant Secretary of the Navy under John D. Long
of Massachusetts. Foreseeing that war with Spain was inevitable, he insisted
on putting the United States fleet in preparation for instant action.
When the war with Spain came, he resigned his naval position in May 1898,
and entered the military service as Lieutenant Colonel, First United States
Cavalry Volunteers, known subsequently as the 'Rough Riders'. He was in
command of his regiment in the fight at San Juan Hill, was commended for
gallantry and promoted to be Colonel.
In November 1898, Roosevelt was elected Governor of the State of New York.
During his incumbency, he fought strenuously against boss control and
for the many measures he had advocated while United States Civil Service
Commissioner. The Republican National Convention in Philadelphia, 1900,
nominated him for the Vice-Presidency on the McKinley ticket, a candidacy
which Roosevelt was very reluctant to accept. President McKinley was assassinated
on in September 1901, and Roosevelt succeeded to the Presidency at the
age of 43. During his term of office he fulfilled his promise and adhered
strictly to the Republican platform and principles as enunciated by McKinley
during the campaign, and retained the Cabinet which McKinley had chosen.
One of his outstanding acts was to appoint the Anthracite Strike Arbitration
Commission, which brought about peace in the anthracite coal regions for
many subsequent years. The Republican National Convention at Chicago in
1904 unanimously nominated Roosevelt for the Presidency, and he received
7,623,486 popular votes and 336 electoral votes to 5,077,970 popular votes
and 140 electoral college votes given for the Democratic candidate, Alton
B. Parker. During his presidency, Roosevelt endeavoured to regulate the
influence of large corporations without destroying their equities. He
resisted the German Kaiser and brought about the submission of the Moroccan
dispute to a conference of the Powers of Algeciras. Evidence has come
to light that both Roosevelt and his Secretary, John Hay, were well aware
at that time of the plans of the German Emperor for universal dominion,
and they succeeded in frustrating those plans so far as American interests
were concerned, and particularly in relation to China. Through Roosevelt's
influence in 1905 Russia was persuaded to come to terms with Japan and
thus close the costly Russo-Japanese War, for which he received the Nobel
Prize in 1906. Throughout his administration, Roosevelt's chief domestic
policy was the conservation of natural resources. The most conspicuous
and spectacular of Roosevelt's acts as President was the recognition of
the new republic of Panama, which led to the subsequent completion of
the Panama Canal.
Upon the expiration, of his term Roosevelt went immediately on a big game
hunting excursion through Central Africa. From 1909 to 1914, he was contributing
editor of the Outlook, in which journal he commented on national
and international affairs. In 1910, he was special ambassador of the United
States at the funeral of King Edward VII. Upon his return from Africa
and Europe, Roosevelt became convinced that the Republican Party was falling
into the hands of reactionaries. The Republican National Convention, Chicago,
1912, brought on a crisis in which the Liberal or Progressive Republicans
demanded Roosevelt's nomination. There was bitter dispute over the seating
of certain delegates, but William H. Taft was nominated for the presidency.
Owing to a belief that certain rulings of the Chairman were unparliamentary,
the Progressive Republicans felt that they were not bound by the vote.
This gave birth to what was known as the Progressive or Bull Moose Party,
which six weeks later met in Chicago and nominated Roosevelt for the presidency
on a new party ticket. The platform adopted stressed many of the liberal
doctrines which Roosevelt had advocated during his career, and some to
which he gave personally only reluctant assent. The chief planks in the
platform were direct primaries, conservation of natural resources, woman
suffrage, the initiative, the referendum and the recall of judicial decisions.
Woodrow Wilson, Governor of New Jersey, was nominated by the Democratic
Party, which resulted in an intensely bitter three-cornered fight. At
the election on Nov. 5, Wilson was elected by 6,286,000 votes out of 15,310,000.
Roosevelt received 4,126,000 and Taft 3,483,000.
Although many of the Progressives felt that they had formed a new permanent
political party, Roosevelt did not share their views, for in 1916 he gave
his unqualified support to Charles E. Hughes, the Republican candidate
for the presidency. In 1913, Roosevelt went to South America where he
delivered a series of addresses, and in 1914 explored a tributary of the
Madeira river, in Brazil, for a distance of 600 miles. Fever contracted
during this expedition led to physical troubles, which finally ended in
death. The year 1915 is memorable in his life because of a law-suit brought
against him by William Barnes, Jr, of Albany, N. Y., charging Roosevelt
with libel. The verdict was in favour of the defendant. The Progressive
Party in 1916 nominated Roosevelt for the presidency which he declined
almost immediately, in order to throw his personal influence in favour
of Hughes against Wilson.
During the First World War, Roosevelt spoke and wrote incessantly on the
duty of America to take a more positive stand in the conflict. He offered
to raise and equip an army division or several divisions and lead them
to France in 1917, but the offer was declined by President Wilson. Roosevelt
died unexpectedly on the 6th of January 1919. Since his death all partisan
feeling toward him has passed away, and he is now generally recognised
as one of the greatest leaders of the United States, certainly the most
versatile man America has produced. He was apparently impulsive in his
utterances, but when his conclusions were examined, almost invariably
they were found to rest upon sound erudition and had been reached by sustained
and consecutive thought. His reading was unusually extensive, and his
personal friendship with statesmen, scientists and eminent thinkers and
writers of many lands made him familiar with the best and most advanced
contemporaneous thought of the world.
Place of birth: New York City
Place of first marriage: Brookline, Mass.
Place of second marriage: London, England
Place of death: Oyster Bay, New York
Place of burial: Youngs Memorial Cemetery, Oyster Bay
Son of Theodore Roosevelt and Martha Bulloch. He was married firstly to
Alice Hathaway in 1880, and secondly to Edith Carow in 1886. He had issue
by both wives.
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