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| Term 1901-1909 |
Party Republican |
Born October 27, 1858, in New York, New York |
Died January 6, 1919, in Oyster Bay, New York |
| Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks |
First Lady Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt (Second Wife) |
Previous Occupation Writer, Lawyer, Public Official |
States in Union 46 |
| Family
Roosevelt’s parents were Theodore and Martha Bulloch Roosevelt. Roosevelt married Alice Hathaway Lee in 1880, who died in 1884. They had one daughter, Alice Lee. In 1886 Roosevelt married Edith Kermit Carow, who served as first lady. They had five children together: Theodore, Kermit, Ethel Carow, Archibald Bulloch, and Quentin. |
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Legacy Roosevelt became the youngest president yet at age 42 when he rose to the office upon President McKinley’s assassination. He brought his endless energy and love of the outdoors to the national stage, and was the first president committed to conservation of natural resources. He in fact created the U.S. Forest Service and signed the 1906 Antiquities Act, which designated 18 national monuments. He also worked with Congress to establish five national parks and 51 wildlife refuges, as well as to protect more than 125 million acres of land as national forests. Roosevelt recognized the need for a more direct shipping route between the Atlantic and the Pacific and therefore sought the construction of the Panama Canal. Though Columbia rejected the idea of constructing a canal across Panama, the president encouraged Panama to fight for its independence, which later allowed the U.S. to build and control the canal. Roosevelt left the presidency voluntarily after two terms, but then chose to challenge his successor William Taft for the Republican nomination in 1912. Roosevelt lost and so ran as an Independent. Republican votes were split between Taft and Roosevelt, so in 1912 Woodrow Wilson was elected as the 28th president. |
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Quotes Roosevelt’s vitality is legendary. Regarding his approach to life, he once stated, “Get action. Do things; be sane; don’t fritter away your time; create, act, take a place wherever you are and be somebody; get action.” |
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| At This Time 1901: Pablo Picasso engages in his Blue Period • Ragtime jazz develops in the U.S. Electricity begins to replace steam as a power source • Wilhelm Maybach constructs the first Mercedes car • 1902: Coal miners go on strike • The U.S. acquires control over the Panama Canal • 1903: The Alaskan frontier is settled • Jack London writes The Call of the Wild • 1903: The longest film yet is created, The Great Train Robbery • Orville and Wilbur Wright fly a powered airplane over Kitty Hawk, North Carolina • Henry Ford establishes the Fort Motor Company • The first Tour de France bicycle race is held • 1904: German Max Weber writes The Protestant Ethic and the Birth of Capitalism • Music is transmitted via radio for the first time at Graz, Austria • Rutherford and Soddy postulate the general theory of radioactivity • 1905: Edith Wharton writes House of Mirth • Zenobia by L. A. Coerne is the first American opera to be produced in Europe • Albert Einstein formulates his Special Theory of Relativity • 1906: U.S. troops occupy Cuba • Upton Sinclair writes The Jungle • Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen traverses the Northwest Passage and determines the position of the magnetic North Pole • 1907: Roosevelt bars Japanese from immigrating to the U.S • The Bankers’ Panic causes a run on banks, which is stopped when J. P. Morgan imports $100 million in gold from Europe • The first Cubist exhibition is held in Paris • Gustav Mahler writes The Symphony of a Thousand • Ivan Pavlov studies conditioned reflexes • The first daily comic strip (“Mr. Mutt”) is published • 1908: Lucy M. Montgomery writes Anne of Green Gables • Fountain pens become popular • The Ford Motor Company produces the first Model “T” |
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| Did You Know? Roosevelt was the first president to call the president’s residence the "White House." The White House had previously been called the “Executive Mansion” or the “President’s House.” |
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| Learn More At: http://theodoreroosevelt.org (Comprehensive information about Roosevelt sponsored by the Theodore Roosevelt Association, including additional source material and educational lesson plans.) |
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| Field Trips for Theodore Roosevelt (Teddy Roosevelt)
Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site |
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