President Roosevelt
We present on the cover of this issue
a half-tone picture of the successor to our late lamented President,
William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, the twenty-sixth President
of the United States. He was born at No. 28 E. Twentieth street,
New York City, Oct. 27, 1858, and is the youngest President that
has ever occupied the White House. The record of the Roosevelts
goes back more than three hundred years, and eight generations of
his father’s family have lived in New York, while members of the
family have taken active parts in all the wars of the country from
the Revolution to the Spanish War, and a rugged probity of character
has marked the line from Nicholas Roosevelt, who was an alderman
in New York City in 1700, through all the generations.
The President is of mingled Dutch,
Scotch-Irish and French Huguenot ancestry. When a boy he was quite
delicate, though strong in mind and will power, and by careful exercise
and following healthful dietetic rules he eventually became robust,
and entered Harvard College abundantly able to withstand the rough
side of college life, graduating from this institution in 1880,
when he began the study of law. In 1881 when but 23 years of age
he was elected to the Assembly from the Twenty-first District of
New York, serving through 1883 and 1884, and made a good record
as an energetic, honest legislator. He was chairman of the Committee
on Cities, and introduced many reform measures, and as a member
of the Assembly did much to further the passage of the State Civil
Service Reform Law.
From 1884 to 1886 he was a ranchman
in Dakota, and was as enthusiastic in that as he was in politics.
He was the Republican candidate for
Mayor of New York in 1886, his opponents being Abram S. Hewitt,
United Democracy, and Henry George, United Labor, Mr. Hewitt being
elected by about 22,000 plurality. Subsequently, he was appointed
a Republican member of the United States Civil Service Commission
by President Cleveland in his first administration, and served with
commendable distinction. He held this office until May 1, 1895,
when he resigned to accept the office of Police Commissioner of
New York, tendered him by Mayor Strong, and his record as President
of the Police Board of New York will be of lasting memory, especially
with many then in official place. He believed the way to get rid
of a bad law was to vigorously enforce it, which resulted in many
reforms. He put forth every effort to take politics out of the police
department, and succeeded in bringing the department to a high degree
of efficiency.
Being tendered the position of Assistant
Secretary of the Navy by President McKinley, he resigned as Police
Commissioner and became Assistant Secretary on April 6, 1897; but
when war was declared with Spain, the family distinction of a Roosevelt
in every American war must be kept up, and he resigned to organize
and go to the front with a regiment, the nucleus of which were the
sturdy men he had met while a ranchman in the West. These were joined
by scores of young men, many of prominent families. The regiment
became known as Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, though the regiment was
commanded by Colonel Wood, of the regular [688][689]
army, with Mr. Roosevelt as Lieutenant Colonel until promoted. His
record in war was as vigorous as elsewhere. When the war was over
he returned to New York City and accepted the nomination for Governor,
and was elected to that responsible office on Nov. 8, 1898.
His popularity became national in
scope and against his wishes he was nominated for Vice-President
and elected on November 6, 1900.
A record to be exceedingly proud of.
A grand example of what may be accomplished under our flag of liberty
and equality when men are actuated by such principles as enunciated
by Roosevelt himself in the following terse paragraph:
I wish to preach, not the doctrine
of ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the strenuous life; the
life of toil and effort, of labor and strife; to preach that
highest form of success which comes, not to the man who desires
mere easy peace, but to the man who does not shirk from hardship,
or from bitter toil, and who, out of these, wins the splendid,
ultimate triumph.
It would seem almost providential
that we should have one of such sturdy character and honesty of
purpose ready for the unlooked for emergency that came to put our
country and the world in mourning, when it seemed almost as though
the wheels of government had stopped. But when the last honors had
been paid to the beloved dead and he was at rest, there was no lack
of confidence manifest as Theodore Roosevelt stepped into the pilot
house and assumed the duties of the great office of President of
the United States; President McKinley’s official family became his
official family, and the ship of state moved on with no political
tidal wave, nor evidence of personal ambition other than that which
created the confidence the people entertain in the new President.
A confidence evidently based upon a belief that his rules of life
are in harmony with the following public declaration of his own:
No nation, no matter how glorious
its history, can exist unless it practices—practices, mind you,
not merely preaches—civic honesty, civic decency, civic righteousness.
No nation can permanently prosper unless the decalogue and the
golden rule are its guides in public as in private life.
|