The Debate Over Executive Orders Began With Teddy Roosevelt’s Mad Passion for Conservation
Teddy used nearly 10 times as many executive orders as his predecessor. The repercussions are still felt today
Why Teddy Roosevelt Tried to Bully His Way Onto the WWI Battlefield
Tensions ran high when President Wilson quashed the return of the former president’s Rough Riders
World War I Letters Show Theodore Roosevelt’s Unbearable Grief After the Death of his Son
A rich trove of letters in the new book “My Fellow Soldiers” tells the stories of generals, doughboys, doctors and nurses, and those on the home front
The History of the American West Gets a Much-Needed Rewrite
Artists, historians and filmmakers alike have been guilty of creating a mythologized version of the U.S. expansion to the west
Why Do Humans Have Canine Teeth and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
A massive collection of campaign materials dating from 1789 reveals that little has changed in how America shows its affection for their candidate
Global Diplomacy Was in Theodore Roosevelt’s Hands, But His Daughter Stole the Show
Alice Roosevelt’s 1905 journey to Japan, Korea and China is documented in rare photographs held by the Freer and Sackler Galleries
The Roosevelt Family Built a New York Coffee Chain 50 Years Before Starbucks
Teddy Roosevelt’s children brought fresh-roasted beans and European coffeehouse culture to Manhattan
Ken Burns’ New Series, Based on Newly Discovered Letters, Reveals a New Side of FDR
In “The Roosevelts”, Burns examines the towering but flawed figures who really understood how character defined leadership
Never underestimate the role of sentimentality in the making of american myths and heroes
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