THEODORE ROOSEVELT
Biography

Theodore Roosevelt was one of the most popular American
presidents as well as one of the most important. With his zest for life
and his love of controversy, he captured the public's imagination as no
President since Andrew Jackson had done. His willingness to shoulder the
burdens of world power and to struggle with the problems caused by the
growth of industry made his administration one of the most significant
in U.S. history.
Roosevelt was sworn in as president on September 14, 1901,
following the assassination of President William Mckinley. At 42 years
of age he was the youngest person ever to become president of the United
States. Fortunately, 15 years of public service, particularly as governor
of New York, had also made him one of the best prepared presidents.
First Marriage, Assemblyman, Rancher
In 1880, a few months after graduation from Harvard College,
Roosevelt married a charming young lady, Alice Hathaway Lee of Chestnut
Hill, Massachusetts. After a short honeymoon he started to study law at
Columbia University. He had little interest in legal details, however.
In 1881, he gave up the study of law upon his election to the first of
three terms in the New York State Assembly.
Roosevelt was only 23 years old when he took his seat in
January 1882. But his courageous support of good government soon earned
him a statewide reputation, and he rose rapidly in influence. He became
the leader of a group of reform-minded Republicans and pushed through
several bills strengthening the government of New York City. At the same
time, he overcame a belief that government should not interfere in the
economy and fought successfully for the regulation of tenement workshops.
Early in his third term, in 1884, Roosevelt's mother died.
A few hours later his wife, who had given birth to a baby girl a short
while before, also died. Though grief-stricken, Roosevelt carried on his
duties until the end of the session. As he wrote to a close friend, It
was a grim and evil fate, but I have never believed it did any good to
flinch or yield for any blow, nor does it lighten the blow to cease from
working. That summer he retired temporarily from politics and went
out to the Dakota Territory to raise cattle on his ranch on the Little
Missouri River.
When Roosevelt first appeared in the West, veteran cowboys
and hunters were amused by his thick glasses, eastern accent, and gentlemanly
manners. But after he had knocked out a drunken stranger who threatened
him with two pistols and had proved himself in a half dozen other incidents,
he was accepted. Within a year he was regarded as one of the region's
ablest young leaders.
Public Service
Roosevelt returned from the West in the fall of 1886 to
suffer defeat in a race for mayor of New York. That same year he married
a childhood sweetheart, Edith Carow, and settled in a great rambling house
on Sagamore Hill, overlooking Oyster Bay, Long Island. Four sons and a
daughter were born to them.
In 1889 he accepted an appointment to the United States
Civil Service Commission. Roosevelt at once gave the commission new life,
and for 6 years he enforced the laws honestly and fearlessly. When he
resigned in 1895 to accept the presidency of the New York City Police
Board, the civil service system had become an important part of American
government.
As New York police commissioner, Roosevelt prowled the streets
after midnight, overhauled the promotion system, and modernized the force.
In 1897 he resigned from the Police Board to become assistant secretary
of the Navy.
Rough Rider and Governor
Roosevelt's service in the Navy Department and in the war
against Spain brought out his aggressive qualities. He believed at the
time that power was necessary for a country to achieve greatness, and
that war was a test of manliness. He also believed that civilized nations
had a right to interfere in the affairs of less advanced nations in order
to forward the march of civilization. He demanded that the United States
build up its fleet, drive Spain from the Western Hemisphere, and acquire
colonies of its own.
Soon after the Spanish-American War broke out in 1898, Roosevelt
helped organize the First United States Volunteer Cavalry Regiment (the
Rough Riders). He took command of the regiment in Cuba, and
on July 1 he led an assault on a hill outside Santiago (Kettle Hill, not
San Juan Hill as many believe). For hours he braved withering gunfire
from the heights as he rode up and down the line urging his men, who were
on foot, to press the attack. His elbow was nicked, a soldier was killed
at his feet, and he had several other narrow escapes. But he rallied his
own and other troops, and the hill was captured.
As soon as Roosevelt returned to New York in the fall of
1898, Republican bosses nominated him for governor. They hoped that his
war record and reputation as a reformer would cause the voters to overlook
a series of recent scandals within the party. After being elected by a
narrow margin, Roosevelt compelled the bosses to accept a number of reform
measures. These included a tax on corporation franchises, regulation of
sweatshops, a raise in schoolteachers salaries, and a conservation
program. This angered the businessmen who supported the bosses. So Republican
leaders practically forced Roosevelt to accept the Vice-Presidential nomination
in 1900, although he wanted a second term as governor. In the election
William McKinley and Roosevelt defeated
the Democratic candidates, William Jennings Bryan and Adlai E. Stevenson
(1835-1914). Six months after their inauguration McKinley was dead and
Roosevelt was the new president of the United States.
President
The main drive of Roosevelt's administration was toward
a balance of economic interests. He believed that he should represent
all the peoplefarmers, laborers, and white-collar workers as well
as businessmen. Roosevelt called his program the Square Deal. He began
to put it into effect 5 months after he took office by starting antitrust
proceedings against the Northern Securities Company, a giant holding company.
Holding companies controlled other companies and were thus able to reduce
competition. Then in the fall of 1902, Roosevelt helped settle a long
coal strike on terms favorable to the workers. This marked the first time
that a president who took action in a strike had failed to side with management.
Despite his popular fame as a trustbuster,Roosevelt
continued to believe that bigness was good economically. He felt that
large corporations should be regulated rather than destroyed. In 1903
he pushed through Congress a bill to form a Bureau of Corporations. That
same year he gave his support to the Elkins Bill to prohibit railroad
rebates. This was a practice in which railroads returned part of their
payment to favored customers.
Foreign Policy
Roosevelt's foreign policy was guided by the belief that
the United States must police the Western Hemisphere and should accept
the responsibilities of world power. He felt that the United States was
morally bound to uplift the people of the Philippines, which the United
States had acquired from Spain. He worked conscientiously to improve the
economy of the Filipinos and prepare them for self- government. In 1902
he persuaded Germany to arbitrate a dispute with Venezuela. In 1903 he
acquired the Canal Zone after Panama broke away from Colombia. The circumstances
left a feeling of ill will in Colombia.
In 1905, at the request of the government of Santo Domingo
(now the Dominican Republic), Roosevelt took over control of customs collections
in that misgoverned country. He did not want to do so. But he feared that
European powers might take control for nonpayment of debts if the United
States did not act. He then announced in a public letter that the United
States had a right to intervene in the internal affairs of Latin-American
countries unable to keep order. This policy became known as the Roosevelt
Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.
Second Presidential Term
Roosevelt's flair for the dramatic combined with his solid
achievements to assure him a term in his own right. In the election of
1904 he won a landslide victory over his conservative Democratic opponent,
Judge Alton B. Parker (1852-1926) of New York. The most productive years
of his presidency followed. In a masterful display of leadership, Roosevelt
forced the conservative Republicans into line by threatening to lower
the tariff, or tax, on imports. (The Republicans generally favored a high
tariff to protect American industry.) As a result, he won conservative
support for a number of reforms in 1906among them the Hepburn Act
to regulate railroads, the Pure Food and Drug Act, and employers' liability
legislation.
Meanwhile, Roosevelt and his chief forester, Gifford Pinchot
(1865-1946), pushed conservation forward. Their program was based on the
theory that natural resources belong to all the people, that scientific
forestry would provide a constant supply of timber, and that river valleys
should be developed as entire units. Roosevelt and Pinchot were bitterly
opposed by small lumber companies, electric power corporations, and states
righters. But progress was made. The Reclamation Act of 1902 provided
for a large irrigation project in the southwestern United States. Many
big lumber companies were won over to scientific forestry. More than 125
million acres (over 50.5 million hectares) were added to the national
forests, and the number of national parks doubled. Sixteen national monuments
were created, and 51 wildlife refuges were established.
In foreign affairs Roosevelts second term saw a retreat
from his earlier imperialism. He tried mainly to protect the Philippines,
support a balance of power in the Far East, and build up friendship with
the Japanese. In 1905 he offered his good offices to end the Russo- Japanese
War. His mediation proved successful and earned him the Nobel peace prize.
On the other hand he served notice that he still carried a big stick
by sending the American fleet on a world cruise in 1907.
As Roosevelt's term of office neared its end, Congress grew
more and more resentful of his strong leadership and progressive policies.
Again and again during his last 2 years Congress refused to do what he
asked. Roosevelt's insight into the nations problems continued to
deepen, however. On January 31, 1908, he sent Congress the most radical
message written by a president to that time. It called, among other things,
for better conditions for workers and for the arrest of businessmen who
broke the law.
In spite of his troubles with Congress, Roosevelts
great energy and straightforward speeches appealed more than ever to the
man in the street. He could have been renominated easily had he chosen.
But he decided instead to support the candidacy of one of his dearest
friends, Secretary of War William Howard Taft.
Soon after Taft was inaugurated in 1909, Roosevelt left for Africa to
hunt big game and collect wildlife specimens for the Smithsonian Institution.
The Bull Moose Party
While Roosevelt was in Africa, progressivism was gaining
new force in the United States. But instead of encouraging its growth
as Roosevelt had done, President Taft tried to hold it back. This put
him on the side of the Republican conservatives who had opposed Roosevelt's
policies.
In 1910 Roosevelt returned to the United States. Although
irritated at Taft's policies, he at first tried to avoid hurting his old
friend. But it was not in Roosevelt's nature to keep silent. In a series
of speeches in the Midwest he set forth his own views, which he called
the New Nationalism.
The New Nationalism was an extension of the progressive
program he had urged in the last years of his presidency. It called for
steeply graduated income and inheritance taxes and a long list of other
social and political reforms. Finally, in 1912, Roosevelt yielded to the
pleas of progressive midwestern Republicans and challenged Taft for the
presidential nomination. But the Republican Convention failed to nominate
Roosevelt in spite of his two-to-one victory over Taft in the primary
elections. Roosevelt then organized the Progressive Party, better known
as the Bull Moose Party. (I am as strong as a bull moose,
he had once commented.) The new party was supported by most of the country's
social workers, intellectuals, and progressive- minded citizens.
Roosevelts leadership of the progressive movement
stirred the social conscience of middle-class America. Though Woodrow
Wilson, the Democratic candidate, won the three-cornered contest with
about 42 percent of the popular vote, Roosevelt ran far ahead of Taft.
In a sense, too, Roosevelt was vindicated in defeat. For by 1916 Wilson
had written a great deal of Roosevelt's New Nationalism into law.
Return to Writing and Exploration
After his defeat in 1912 Roosevelt wrote his autobiography.
It is a colorful and vigorously written book and still the most informative
memoir ever written by a former president.
Then, in 1913, Roosevelt decided to indulge his love of
adventure once more by exploring an unknown South American river, the
River of Doubt. It was a harrowing experience. He almost died of an injury
suffered in a heroic effort to save two capsized boats. He was then stricken
with malaria. Realizing that he was a burden, Roosevelt begged his companions,
who included his son Kermit, to go on without him. But they insisted on
bringing him out of the jungle.
Final Years
Upon the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Roosevelt at first
refused to take sides. But after a few months, he decided that the interests
of the United States and the world would best be served by U.S. support
of the Allies, led by Britain and France, against Germany, which he feared
would dominate the European continent. Early in 1915 he became a leader
of the movement to prepare the United States for possible entry into the
war. When the United States declared war against Germany in 1917, Roosevelt
asked President Woodrow Wilson for permission
to raise a volunteer division. But Wilson refused, and Roosevelt devoted
himself to spurring the war effort at home.
Bouts of malaria sapped Roosevelt's health in his last years.
He was also greatly saddened by the death of his youngest son, Quentin.
An aviator, he was killed in an air battle over France in 1918. Roosevelt
himself died at Sagamore Hill on January 6, 1919.
William H. Harbaugh
University of Virginia Author, Power and Responsibility: The Life and
Times of Theodore Roosevelt
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