Theodore Rex (131 page)

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Authors: Edmund Morris

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Shortly after three o’clock, the railway north was cleared, and Roosevelt passed with his wife and son through a crowd that had swelled to several thousand. The vast station hall reverberated with roars as he waved, flashed his teeth and pince-nez, and disappeared down the platform. At 3:26 on the station register, Theodore Roosevelt officially departed Washington, D.C.

THE STORM HAD
abated, but with wires down and only hand signals operating for the next thirty miles, the train took more than two hours to get to Baltimore. By then darkness had fallen, and Roosevelt
did not show himself, as if to emphasize to a small, wistful crowd that he was no longer public property.

Seven years and a hundred and sixty-nine days before, on another lowering
evening, he had come south along this same track, eager to begin work as President of the United States. For all his show of grief for McKinley, and natural nervous tension, he had been happy then, as he was happy now; happy at the large things he had managed to achieve—a canal, a coal-strike settlement, a peace treaty, a national conservation conference—contented with myriad smaller triumphs, proud of his appointees, passionate about his country, in love with his wife and children; many-friended, much-honored, lusty in his physical and intellectual appetites,
constantly bubbling with mirth; happy, above all, at having kept his promise not to hold on too long to power. Brownsville had been proof to many, and perhaps even a warning to himself, of the truth of Lord
Acton’s famous dictum.

Already, in his fifty-first year, epitaphs of him were beginning to appear, distressingly written in the past historic, from H. G. Wells’s claim that he seemed “
a very symbol of the creative will in man” to Henry Adams’s “
Roosevelt, more than any other man living within the range of notoriety, showed the singular primitive quality that belongs to ultimate matter—the quality that medieval theology assigned to God—he was pure act.”

In time, no doubt, the inevitable memorial committee would form, and solemn scholars would comb his works for quotations suitable to chisel in stone. Statute books and official histories would celebrate his administrative achievements: the Monroe Doctrine reaffirmed, the Old World banished from the New World, the great Canal being cut; peace established in the Far East; the Open Door swinging freely in Manchuria and Morocco; Cuba liberated (and returned to self-government just in time for his departure); the Philippines pacified; the Navy hugely strengthened, known literally around the world; the Army, shorn of its old deadwood generals, feeling the green sap of younger replacements; capital and labor balanced off, the lynch rate declining, the gospel of cleaner politics now canon, and enough progressive principles established, or made part of the national debate, to keep legislative reformers busy for at least ten years.

But for millions of contemporary Americans, he was already memorialized in the eighteen national monuments and five national parks he had created by executive order, or cajoled out of Congress. The “inventory,” as Gifford Pinchot would say, included protected pinnacles, a crater lake, a rain forest and a petrified forest, a wind cave and a jewel cave, cliff dwellings, a cinder cone and skyscraper of hardened magma, sequoia stands, glacier meadows, and the grandest of all canyons.

Less solidly but equally enduringly, he left behind a folk consensus that he had been the most powerfully positive American leader since Abraham Lincoln. He had spent much of his two terms crossing and recrossing the country, east and west, south and north, reminding anyone who would listen to him that he embodied all America’s variety and the whole of its
unity; that what he had made of his own life was possible to all, even to boys born as sickly as himself.
Uncounted men, women, and children who had crowded around the presidential caboose to stare and listen to him now carried, forever etched in memory, the image of his receding grin and wave.

(photo credit epl.2)

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

PORTIONS OF THE
manuscript of
Theodore Rex
were written at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C., and in the research library of the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site, New York City. The author expresses his great debt to these two institutions. He also thanks the following people for helping him in ways more than ordinary: Daniel J. Boorstin; David Burnham; Michael Cahill; William Chanler; Karen Chapel; Catherine Cook; Wallace Finley Dailey; Amanda Deaver; George Didden III; Maurice F. X. Donohue; Philip Dunne; G. Thomas Edwards; Allen Fitz-Gerald; Jeff Flannery; Stephen Fox; Rob Friedman; David Gerstner; Ann Godoff; Julie Grau; Sharon Harris, translator; Paul T. Heffron; Stephen B. Hess; Mia Kazanjian; Dave Kelly; Michael P. Lacey; Alton A. Lindsay; Robert Loomis; Henry Luce III; Margaret Fox Mandel; Thomas Mann; Albro Martin; Alison Martin; John M. Mason; Robert K. Massie; Lyle McGeoch; Bruce K. MacLaury; Charles Moose; Sylvia Jukes Morris; Angela Orcken; John Gray Peatman; Christina Rae; P. James Roosevelt; W. S. Sims; Brad Smith; Kathy Smith; Mary E. Smith; Michael D. Sternfeld; Joanna Sturm; Robert N. Walton; and John D. Weaver.

John Allen Gable is especially thanked for a scholarly review of the manuscript, and the services of Rebecca Kramer and Timothy Mennel are remembered with profound gratitude.

ARCHIVES

Unless otherwise noted, collections are held in the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

ABP    
Alton B. Parker Papers
AC
Author’s Collection, Washington, D.C.
ADW
Andrew Dickson White Papers, Olin Library, Cornell University,
Ithaca, N.Y.
AJB
Albert J. Beveridge Papers
ARL
Alice Roosevelt Longworth Papers
AS
Albert Shaw Papers, Manuscript Division, New York Public Library (NYPL)
BTW
Booker T. Washington Papers
CS
Carl Schurz Papers
CSR
Cecil Spring Rice Papers, Churchill College, Cambridge, U.K.
EMH
Edwin M. Hood Papers
ER
Elihu Root Papers
ERD
Ethel Roosevelt Derby Papers, privately held (now in TRC, below)
ES
Emily Stewart Papers
EWC
Edward W. Carmack Papers, Tennessee State Library and Archives,
Nashville, Tenn.
FBJ
Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection
FBL
Francis B. Loomis Papers, Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif.
FMcC
Frank McCoy Papers
GC
Grover Cleveland Papers
GD
George Dewey Papers
GBC
George B. Cortelyou Papers
GVM
George von Lengerke Meyer Papers
GWP
George Walbridge Perkins Papers, Butler Library, Columbia University,
New York, N.Y.
HBP
Harold Brayman Papers, University of Delaware Library, Newark,
Del.
HH
Hermann Hagedorn Papers, TRB (below)
HJ
Henry James Papers, Houghton Library, Harvard University,
Cambridge, Mass.
HKB
Howard K. Beale Papers, Mudd Library, Princeton University,
Princeton, N.J.
HMD
Sir H. Mortimer Durand Papers, School of Oriental and African
Studies Library, London University, U.K.
HP
Henry Pringle Papers, Houghton Library, Harvard University,
Cambridge, Mass.
HW
Henry Watterson Papers
JB
John Barrett Papers
JBM
John Bassett Moore Papers
JCOL
John C. O’Laughlin Papers
JCS
John Coit Spooner Papers
JH
John Hay Papers, Hay Library, Brown University, Providence, R.I.
JHC
Joseph Hodges Choate Papers
JHW
James H. Wilson Papers
JJ
Jules Jusserand Papers, Archives of the French Foreign Ministry, Quai d’Orsay, Paris, France
JM
John Mitchell Papers, Catholic University, Washington, D.C.
JRG
James R. Garfield Papers
JSC
James S. Clarkson Papers
JTM
John Tyler Morgan Papers
KR
Kermit Roosevelt Papers
LCG
Lyman C. Gage Papers
LG
Lloyd C. Griscom Papers
LW
Leonard Wood Papers
MHM
Mark Hanna McCormick Family Papers
MHS
Massachusetts Historical Society, Cambridge, Mass.
MS
Mark Sullivan Papers, Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif.
MST
Moorfield Storey Papers
NA
The National Archives, Washington, D.C.
NWA
Nelson W. Aldrich Papers
NYHS
The New-York Historical Society, New York, N.Y.
OSS
Oscar S. Straus Papers
PB
Poultney Bigelow Papers, Manuscript Division, NYPL
PBV
Philippe Bunau-Varilla Papers
PCJ
Philip C. Jessup Papers
PCK
Philander Chase Knox Papers
RLF
Robert M. LaFollette Papers
RO
Richard Olney Papers
RSB
Ray Stannard Baker Papers
SH
Sagamore Hill National Historic Site Archives, Oyster Bay, N.Y.
TAB
Theodore A. Bingham Papers
TD
Tyler Dennett Papers
TH
Tomás Herrán Papers, Lauinger Library, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
TRAF
Theodore Roosevelt Association Film Collection, Motion Picture Division
TRB
Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site Archives, New York, N.Y.
TRC
Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Widener and Houghton Libraries, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
TRJR
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Papers
TRP
Theodore Roosevelt Papers
WF
Wadsworth Family Papers
WAW
William Allen White Papers
WHM
William H. Moody Papers
WHT
William Howard Taft Papers
WVD
Willis Van Devanter Papers

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