<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p class="caption1">THEODORE ROOSEVELT</p>
<p class="caption3">AN ADDRESS DELIVERED BY</p>
<p class="caption2">HENRY CABOT LODGE</p>
<p class="caption3">BEFORE THE CONGRESS OF
THE UNITED STATES</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">A tower is fallen, a star is set! Alas! Alas! for Celin.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="p0">THE words of lamentation from the old
Moorish ballad, which in boyhood we
used to recite, must, I think, have risen
to many lips when the world was told that
Theodore Roosevelt was dead. But whatever the
phrase the thought was instant and everywhere.
Variously expressed, you heard it in the crowds
about the bulletin boards, from the man in the
street and the man on the railroads, from the
farmer in the fields, the women in the shops, in
the factories, and in the homes. The pulpit
found in his life a text for sermons. The judge
on the bench, the child at school, alike paused for
a moment, conscious of a loss. The cry of sorrow
came from men and women of all conditions, high
and low, rich and poor, from the learned and the
ignorant, from the multitude who had loved and
followed him, and from those who had opposed
and resisted him. The newspapers pushed aside the
absorbing reports of the events of these fateful days
and gave pages to the man who had died. Flashed
beneath the ocean and through the air went the announcement
of his death, and back came a world-wide
response from courts and cabinets, from press
and people, in other and far-distant lands. Through
it all ran a golden thread of personal feeling which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
gleams so rarely in the somber formalism of public
grief. Everywhere the people felt in their hearts
that:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">A power was passing from the Earth<br/></span>
<span class="i0">To breathless Nature’s dark abyss.<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>It would seem that here was a man, a private citizen,
conspicuous by no office, with no glitter of
power about him, no ability to reward or punish,
gone from the earthly life, who must have been unusual
even among the leaders of men, and who thus
demands our serious consideration.</p>
<p>This is a thought to be borne in mind to-day. We
meet to render honor to the dead, to the great American
whom we mourn. But there is something more
to be done. We must remember that when History,
with steady hand and calm eyes, free from the passions
of the past, comes to make up the final account,
she will call as her principal witnesses the
contemporaries of the man or the event awaiting
her verdict. Here and elsewhere the men and women
who knew Theodore Roosevelt or who belong
to his period will give public utterance to their emotions
and to their judgments in regard to him. This
will be part of the record to which the historian will
turn when our living present has become the past,
of which it is his duty to write. Thus is there a responsibility
placed upon each one of us who will
clearly realize that here, too, is a duty to posterity,
whom we would fain guide to the truth as we see it,
and to whose hands we commit our share in the history
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
of our beloved country—that history so much
of which was made under his leadership.</p>
<p>We can not approach Theodore Roosevelt along
the beaten paths of eulogy or satisfy ourselves with
the empty civilities of commonplace funereal tributes,
for he did not make his life journey over main-traveled
roads, nor was he ever commonplace. Cold
and pompous formalities would be unsuited to him
who was devoid of affectation, who was never self-conscious,
and to whom posturing to draw the
public gaze seemed not only repellent but vulgar.
He had that entire simplicity of manners and
modes of life which is the crowning result of the
highest culture and the finest nature. Like Cromwell,
he would always have said: “Paint me as I
am.” In that spirit, in his spirit of devotion to
truth’s simplicity, I shall try to speak of him to-day
in the presence of the representatives of the great
Government of which he was for seven years the
head.</p>
<p>The rise of any man from humble or still more
from sordid beginnings to the heights of success
always and naturally appeals strongly to the imagination.
It furnishes a vivid contrast which is as
much admired as it is readily understood. It still
retains the wonder which such success awakened in
the days of hereditary lawgivers and high privileges
of birth. Birth and fortune, however, mean
much less now than two centuries ago. To climb
from the place of a printer’s boy to the highest rank
in science, politics, and diplomacy would be far
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
easier to-day than in the eighteenth century, given
a genius like Franklin to do it. Moreover the real
marvel is in the soaring achievement itself, no matter
what the origin of the man who comes by “the
people’s unbought grace to rule his native land”
and who on descending from the official pinnacle
still leads and influences thousands upon thousands
of his fellow men.</p>
<p>Theodore Roosevelt had the good fortune to be
born of a well-known, long-established family,
with every facility for education and with an atmosphere
of patriotism and disinterested service
both to country and humanity all about him. In his
father he had before him an example of lofty public
spirit, from which it would have been difficult to
depart. But if the work of his ancestors relieved
him from the hard struggle which meets an unaided
man at the outset, he also lacked the spur of necessity
to prick the sides of his intent, in itself no small
loss. As a balance to the opportunity which was his
without labor, he had not only the later difficulties
which come to him to whom fate has been kind at
the start; he had also spread before him the temptations
inseparable from such inherited advantages
as fell to his lot—temptations to a life of sports
and pleasure, to lettered ease, to an amateur’s
career in one of the fine arts, perhaps to a money-making
business, likewise an inheritance, none of
them easily to be set aside in obedience to the stern
rule that the larger and more facile the opportunity
the greater and more insistent the responsibility.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
How he refused to tread the pleasant paths that
opened to him on all sides and took the instant way
which led over the rough road of toil and action his
life discloses.</p>
<p>At the beginning, moreover, he had physical difficulties
not lightly to be overcome. He was a delicate
child, suffering acutely from attacks of asthma.
He was not a strong boy, was retiring, fond of books,
and with an intense but solitary devotion to natural
history. As his health gradually improved he became
possessed by the belief, although he perhaps
did not then formulate it, that in the fields of active
life a man could do that which he willed to do; and
this faith was with him to the end. It became very
evident when he went to Harvard. He made himself
an athlete by sheer hard work. Hampered by extreme
near-sightedness, he became none the less a
formidable boxer and an excellent shot. He stood
high in scholarship, but as he worked hard, so he
played hard, and was popular in the university and
beloved by his friends. For a shy and delicate boy
all this meant solid achievement, as well as unusual
determination and force of will. Apparently he
took early to heart and carried out to fulfillment
the noble lines of Clough’s <i>Dipsychus</i>:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i12">In light things<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Prove thou the arms thou long’st to glorify,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Nor fear to work up from the lowest ranks<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Whence come great Nature’s Captains. And high deeds<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Haunt not the fringy edges of the fight,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">But the pell-mell of men.<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When a young man comes out of college he descends
suddenly from the highest place in a little
world to a very obscure corner in a great one. It is
something of a shock, and there is apt to be a chill
in the air. Unless the young man’s life has been
planned beforehand and a place provided for him
by others, which is exceptional, or unless he is fortunate
in a strong and dominating purpose or talent
which drives him to science or art or some particular
profession, he finds himself at this period pausing
and wondering where he can get a grip upon the
vast and confused world into which he has been
plunged.</p>
<p>It is a trying and only too frequently a disheartening
experience, this looking for a career, this effort
to find employment in a huge and hurrying
crowd which appears to have no use for the new-comer.
Roosevelt, thus cast forth on his own resources—his
father, so beloved by him, having died two
years before—fell to work at once, turning to the
study of the law, which he did not like, and to the
completion of a history of the War of 1812 which
he had begun while still in college. With few exceptions,
young beginners in the difficult art of writing
are either too exuberant or too dry. Roosevelt
said that his book was as dry as an encyclopedia,
thus erring in precisely the direction one would not
have expected. The book, be it said, was by no
means so dry as he thought it, and it had some other
admirable qualities. It was clear and thorough, and
the battles by sea and land, especially the former,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
which involved the armaments and crews, the size
and speed of the ships engaged in the famous frigate
and sloop actions, of which we won eleven out
of thirteen, were given with a minute accuracy
never before attempted in the accounts of this war,
and which made the book an authority, a position
it holds to this day.</p>
<p>This was a good deal of sound work for a boy’s
first year out of college. But it did not content
Roosevelt. Inherited influences and inborn desires
made him earnest and eager to render some public
service. In pursuit of this aspiration he joined the
Twenty-first Assembly District Republican Association
of the city of New York, for by such machinery
all politics were carried on in those days. It was
not an association composed of his normal friends;
in fact, the members were not only eminently practical
persons but they were inclined to be rough in
their methods. They were not dreamers, nor were
they laboring under many illusions. Roosevelt went
among them a complete stranger. He differed from
them with entire frankness, concealed nothing, and
by his strong and simple democratic ways, his intense
Americanism, and the magical personal attraction
which went with him to the end, made some
devoted friends. One of the younger leaders, “Joe”
Murray, believed in him, became especially attached
to him, and so continued until death separated
them. Through Murray’s efforts he was
elected to the New York Assembly in 1881, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
thus only one year after leaving college his public
career began. He was just twenty-three.</p>
<p>Very few men make an effective State reputation
in their first year in the lower branch of the State
legislature. I never happened to hear of one who
made a national reputation in such a body. Roosevelt
did both. When he left the assembly after three
years' service he was a national figure, well known,
and of real importance, and also a delegate at large
from the great State of New York to the Republican
national convention of 1884, where he played a
leading part. Energy, ability, and the most entire
courage were the secret of his extraordinary success.
It was a time of flagrant corporate influence in
the New York Legislature, of the “Black Horse
Cavalry,” of a group of members who made money
by sustaining corporation measures or by levying
on corporations and capital through the familiar
artifice of “strike bills.” Roosevelt attacked them
all openly and aggressively and never silently or
quietly. He fought for the impeachment of a judge
solely because he believed the judge corrupt, which
surprised some of his political associates of both
parties, there being, as one practical thinker observed,
“no politics in politics.” He failed to secure
the impeachment, but the fight did not fail, nor
did the people forget it; and despite—perhaps because
of—the enemies he made, he was twice reelected.
He became at the same time a distinct,
well-defined figure to the American people. He had
touched the popular imagination. In this way he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
performed the unexampled feat of leaving the New
York Assembly, which he had entered three years
before an unknown boy, with a national reputation
and with his name at least known throughout the
United States. He was twenty-six years old.</p>
<p>When he left Chicago at the close of the national
convention in June, 1884, he did not return to New
York, but went West to the Bad Lands of the Little
Missouri Valley, where he had purchased a ranch
in the previous year. The early love of natural history
which never abated had developed into a passion
for hunting and for life in the open. He had
begun in the wilds of Maine and then turned to the
West and to a cattle ranch to gratify both tastes.
The life appealed to him and he came to love it.
He herded and rounded up his cattle, he worked as
a cow-puncher, only rather harder than any of
them, and in the intervals he hunted and shot big
game. He also came in contact with men of a new
type, rough, sometimes dangerous, but always vigorous
and often picturesque. With them he had the
same success as with the practical politicians of the
Twenty-first Assembly District, although they
were widely different specimens of mankind.
But all alike were human at bottom and so
was Roosevelt. He argued with them, rode with
them, camped with them, played and joked with
them, but was always master of his outfit.
They respected him and also liked him, because
he was at all times simple, straightforward,
outspoken, and sincere. He became a popular
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>
and well-known figure in that western country
and was regarded as a good fellow, a “white
man,” entirely fearless, thoroughly good-natured
and kind, never quarrelsome, and never safe to
trifle with, bully, or threaten. The life and experiences
of that time found their way into a book, <i>The
Hunting Trips of a Ranchman</i>, interesting in description
and adventure and also showing a marked
literary quality.</p>
<p>In 1886 he ran as Republican candidate for
mayor of New York and might have been elected
had his own party stood by him. But many excellent
men of Republican faith—the “timid good,” as
he called them—panic-stricken by the formidable
candidacy of Henry George, flocked to the support
of Mr. Abram Hewitt, the Democratic candidate,
as the man most certain to defeat the menacing
champion of single taxation. Roosevelt was beaten,
but his campaign, which was entirely his own and
the precursor of many others, his speeches with
their striking quality then visible to the country for
the first time, all combined to fix the attention of
the people upon the losing candidate. Roosevelt
was the one of the candidates who was most interesting,
and again he had touched the imagination of
the people and cut a little deeper into the popular
consciousness and memory.</p>
<p>Two years more of private life, devoted to his
home, where his greatest happiness was always
found, to his ranch, to reading and writing books,
and then came an active part in the campaign of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
1888, resulting in the election of President Harrison,
who made him civil-service commissioner in
the spring of 1889. He was in his thirty-first year.
Civil-service reform as a practical question was
then in its initial stages. The law establishing it,
limited in extent and forced through by a few leaders
of both parties in the Senate, was only six years
old. The promoters of the reform, strong in quality,
but weak in numbers, had compelled a reluctant
acceptance of the law by exercising a balance-of-power
vote in certain States and districts. It had
few earnest supporters in Congress, some lukewarm
friends, and many strong opponents. All the
active politicians were practically against it. Mr.
Conkling had said that when Dr. Johnson told Boswell
“that patriotism was the last refuge of a scoundrel”
he was ignorant of the possibilities of the
word “reform,” and this witticism met with a large
response.</p>
<p>Civil-service reform, meaning the establishment
of a classified service and the removal of routine
administrative offices from politics, had not reached
the masses of the people at all. The average voter
knew and cared nothing about it. When six years
later Roosevelt resigned from the commission the
great body of the people knew well what civil-service
reform meant, large bodies of voters cared a
great deal about it, and it was established and
spreading its control. We have had many excellent
men who have done good work in the Civil Service
Commission, although that work is neither adventurous
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
nor exciting and rarely attracts public attention,
but no one has ever forgotten that Theodore
Roosevelt was once civil-service commissioner.</p>
<p>He found the law struggling for existence,
laughed at, sneered at, surrounded by enemies in
Congress, and with but few fighting friends. He
threw himself into the fray. Congress investigated
the commission about once a year, which was exactly
what Roosevelt desired. Annually, too, the
opponents of the reform would try to defeat the appropriation
for the commission, and this again was
playing into Roosevelt’s hands, for it led to debates,
and the newspapers as a rule sustained the reform.
Senator Gorman mourned in the Senate over the
cruel fate of a “bright young man” who was unable
to tell on examination the distance of Baltimore
from China, and thus was deprived of his inalienable
right to serve his country in the post office.
Roosevelt proved that no such question had ever
been asked and requested the name of the “bright
young man.” The name was not forthcoming, and
the victim of a question never asked goes down
nameless to posterity in the Congressional Record
as merely a “bright young man.” Then General
Grosvenor, a leading Republican of the House, denounced
the commissioner for crediting his district
with an appointee named Rufus Putnam who was
not a resident of the district, and Roosevelt produced
a letter from the general recommending
Rufus Putnam as a resident of his district and a
constituent. All this was unusual. Hitherto it had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
been a safe amusement to ridicule and jeer at civil-service
reform, and here was a commissioner who
dared to reply vigorously to attacks, and even to
prove Senators and Congressmen to be wrong in
their facts. The amusement of baiting the Civil
Service Commission seemed to be less inviting than
before, and, worse still, the entertaining features
seemed to have passed to the public, who enjoyed
and approved the commissioner who disregarded
etiquette and fought hard for the law he was appointed
to enforce. The law suddenly took on new
meaning and became clearly visible in the public
mind, a great service to the cause of good government.</p>
<p>After six years' service in the Civil Service Commission
Roosevelt left Washington to accept the
position of president of the Board of Police Commissioners
of the city of New York, which had been
offered to him by Mayor Strong. It is speaking
within bounds to say that the history of the police
force of New York has been a checkered one in
which the black squares have tended to predominate.
The task which Roosevelt confronted was then,
as always, difficult, and the machinery of four commissioners
and a practically irremovable chief
made action extremely slow and uncertain. Roosevelt
set himself to expel politics and favoritism in
appointments and promotions and to crush corruption
everywhere. In some way he drove through the
obstacles and effected great improvements, although
permanent betterment was perhaps impossible.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
Good men were appointed and meritorious men
promoted as never before, while the corrupt and
dangerous officers were punished in a number of
instances sufficient, at least, to check and discourage
evildoers. Discipline was improved, and the
force became very loyal to the chief commissioner,
because they learned to realize that he was fighting
for right and justice without fear or favor. The results
were also shown in the marked decrease of
crime, which judges pointed out from the bench.
Then, too, it was to be observed that a New York
police commissioner suddenly attracted the attention
of the country. The work which was being done
by Roosevelt in New York, his midnight walks
through the worst quarters of the great city, to see
whether the guardians of the peace did their duty,
which made the newspapers compare him to Haroun
Al Raschid, all appealed to the popular imagination.
A purely local office became national in
his hands, and his picture appeared in the shops
of European cities. There was something more
than vigor and picturesqueness necessary to explain
these phenomena. The truth is that Roosevelt
was really laboring through a welter of details
to carry out certain general principles which went
to the very roots of society and government. He
wished the municipal administration to be something
far greater than a business man’s administration,
which was the demand that had triumphed at
the polls. He wanted to make it an administration
of the workingmen, of the dwellers in the tenements,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
of the poverty and suffering which haunted
the back streets and hidden purlieus of the huge
city. The people did not formulate these purposes
as they watched what he was doing, but they felt
them and understood them by that instinct which is
often so keen in vast bodies of men. The man who
was toiling in the seeming obscurity of the New
York police commission again became very distinct
to his fellow countrymen and deepened their consciousness
of his existence and their comprehension
of his purposes and aspirations.</p>
<p>Striking as was the effect of this police work, it
only lasted for two years. In 1897 he was offered
by President McKinley, whom he had energetically
supported in the preceding campaign, the position
of Assistant Secretary of the Navy. He accepted at
once, for the place and the work both appealed to
him most strongly. The opportunity did not come
without resistance. The President, an old friend,
liked him and believed in him, but the Secretary
of the Navy had doubts, and also fears that Roosevelt
might be a disturbing and restless assistant.
There were many politicians, too, especially in his
own State, whom his activities as civil-service and
police commissioner did not delight, and these men
opposed him. But his friends were powerful and
devoted, and the President appointed him.</p>
<p>His new place had to him a peculiar attraction.
He loved the Navy. He had written its brilliant
history in the War of 1812. He had done all in his
power in stimulating public opinion to support the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
“new Navy” we were just then beginning to build.
That war was coming with Spain he had no doubt.
We were unprepared, of course, even for such a
war as this, but Roosevelt set himself to do what
could be done. The best and most farseeing officers
rallied round him, but the opportunities were limited.
There was much in detail accomplished which
can not be described here, but two acts of his which
had very distinct effect upon the fortunes of the
war must be noted. He saw very plainly—although
most people never perceived it at all—that the
Philippines would be a vital point in any war with
Spain. For this reason it was highly important to
have the right man in command of the Asiatic
Squadron. Roosevelt was satisfied that Dewey was
the right man, and that his rival was not. He set
to work to secure the place for Dewey. Through
the aid of the Senators from Dewey’s native State
and others, he succeeded. Dewey was ordered to
the Asiatic Squadron. Our relations with Spain
grew worse and worse. On February 25, 1898, war
was drawing very near, and that Saturday after-noon
Roosevelt happened to be Acting Secretary,
and sent out the following cablegram:</p>
<div class="tdl" style="margin:1em 10%;"><span class="smcap">Dewey</span>—Hongkong.</div>
<p style="margin:0 10%;">Order the squadron, except the <i>Monocacy</i>, to Hongkong.
Keep full of coal. In the event of declaration of
war, Spain, your duty will be to see that the Spanish
Squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast, and then offensive
operations in the Philippine Islands. Keep
<i>Olympia</i> until further orders.</p>
<div class="tdr" style="margin:0 10%;"><span class="smcap">Roosevelt.</span></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I believe he was never again permitted to be Acting
Secretary. But the deed was done. The wise
word of readiness had been spoken and was not recalled.
War came, and as April closed, Dewey, all
prepared, slipped out of Hongkong and on May 1st
fought the battle of Manila Bay.</p>
<p>Roosevelt, however, did not continue long in the
Navy Department. Many of his friends felt that he
was doing such admirable work there that he ought
to remain, but as soon as war was declared he determined
to go, and his resolution was not to be
shaken. Nothing could prevent his fighting for his
country when the country was at war. Congress had
authorized three volunteer regiments of Cavalry,
and the President and the Secretary of War gave to
Leonard Wood—then a surgeon in the Regular
Army—as colonel, and to Theodore Roosevelt, as
lieutenant colonel, authority to raise one of these
regiments, known officially as the First United
States Volunteer Cavalry, and to all the country as
the “Rough Riders.” The regiment was raised
chiefly in the Southwest and West, where Roosevelt’s
popularity and reputation among the cowboys
and the ranchmen brought many eager recruits to
serve with him. After the regiment had been organized
and equipped they had some difficulty in
getting to Cuba, but Roosevelt as usual broke
through all obstacles, and finally succeeded, with
Colonel Wood, in getting away with two battalions,
leaving one battalion and the horses behind.</p>
<p>The regiment got into action immediately on
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
landing and forced its way, after some sharp fighting
in the jungle, to the high ground on which were
placed the fortifications which defended the approach
to Santiago. Colonel Wood was almost immediately
given command of a brigade, and this
left Roosevelt colonel of the regiment. In the battle
which ensued and which resulted in the capture of
the positions commanding Santiago and the bay,
the Rough Riders took a leading part, storming one
of the San Juan heights, which they christened
Kettle Hill, with Roosevelt leading the men in person.
It was a dashing, gallant assault, well led and
thoroughly successful. Santiago fell after the defeat
of the fleet, and then followed a period of sickness
and suffering—the latter due to unreadiness—where
Roosevelt did everything with his usual
driving energy to save his men, whose loyalty to
their colonel went with them through life. The war
was soon over, but brief as it had been Roosevelt
and his men had highly distinguished themselves,
and he stood out in the popular imagination as one
of the conspicuous figures of the conflict. He
brought his regiment back to the United States,
where they were mustered out, and almost immediately
afterwards he was nominated by the Republicans
as their candidate for governor of the State
of New York. The situation in New York was unfavorable
for the Republicans, and the younger
men told Senator Platt, who dominated the organization
and who had no desire for Roosevelt, that
unless he was nominated they could not win. Thus
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
forced, the organization accepted him, and it was
well for the party that they did so. The campaign
was a sharp one and very doubtful, but Roosevelt
was elected by a narrow margin and assumed office
at the beginning of the new year of 1899. He was
then in his forty-first year.</p>
<p>Many problems faced him and none were evaded.
He was well aware that the “organization” under
Senator Platt would not like many things he was
sure to do, but he determined that he would have
neither personal quarrels nor faction fights. He
knew, being blessed with strong common sense, that
the Republican Party, his own party, was the instrument
by which alone he could attain his ends,
and he did not intend that it should be blunted and
made useless by internal strife. And yet he meant
to have his own way. It was a difficult role which
he undertook to play, but he succeeded. He had
many differences with the organization managers,
but he declined to lose his temper or to have a
break, and he also refused to yield when he felt he
was standing for the right and a principle was at
stake. Thus he prevailed. He won on the canal
question, changed the insurance commissioner, and
carried the insurance legislation he desired. As in
these cases, so it was in lesser things. In the police
commission he had been strongly impressed by the
dangers as he saw them of the undue and often
sinister influence of business, finance, and great
money interests upon government and politics.
These feelings were deepened and broadened by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
his experience and observation on the larger stage
of State administration. The belief that political
equality must be strengthened and sustained by industrial
equality and a larger economic opportunity
was constantly in his thoughts until it became a
governing and guiding principle.</p>
<p>Meantime he grew steadily stronger among the
people, not only of his own State but of the
country, for he was well known throughout the
West, and there they were watching eagerly to see
how the ranchman and colonel of Rough Riders,
who had touched both their hearts and their imagination,
was faring as governor of New York. The
office he held is always regarded as related to the
Presidency, and this, joined to his striking success
as governor, brought him into the presidential field
wherever men speculated about the political future
It was universally agreed that McKinley was
to be renominated, and so the talk turned to making
Roosevelt Vice President. A friend wrote to him
in the summer of 1899 as to this drift of opinion,
then assuming serious proportions. “Do not attempt,”
he said, “to thwart the popular desire. You
are not a man nor are your close friends men who
can plan, arrange, and manage you into office. You
must accept the popular wish, whatever it is, follow
your star, and let the future care for itself. It is the
tradition of our politics, and a very poor tradition,
that the Vice Presidency is a shelf. It ought to be,
and there is no reason why it should not be, a stepping-stone.
Put there by the popular desire, it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
would be so to you.” This view, quite naturally,
did not commend itself to Governor Roosevelt at
the moment. He was doing valuable work in New
York; he was deeply engaged in important reforms
which he had much at heart and which he wished to
carry through; and the Vice Presidency did not attract
him. A year later he was at Philadelphia, a
delegate at large from his State, with his mind unchanged
as to the Vice Presidency, while his New
York friends, anxious to have him continue his
work at Albany, were urging him to refuse. Senator
Platt, for obvious reasons, wished to make him
Vice President, another obstacle to his taking it.
Roosevelt forced the New York delegation to agree
on some one else for Vice President, but he could
not hold the convention, nor could Senator Hanna,
who wisely accepted the situation. Governor Roosevelt
was nominated on the first ballot, all other
candidates withdrawing. He accepted the nomination
little as he liked it.</p>
<p>Thus when it came to the point he instinctively
followed his star and grasped the unvacillating
hand of destiny. Little did he think that destiny
would lead him to the White House through a
tragedy which cut him to the heart. He was on a
mountain in the Adirondacks when a guide made
his way to him across the forest with a telegram
telling him that McKinley, the wise, the kind, the
gentle, with nothing in his heart but good will to
all men, was dying from a wound inflicted by an
anarchist murderer, and that the Vice President
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
must come to Buffalo at once. A rapid night drive
through the woods and a special train brought him
to Buffalo. McKinley was dead before he arrived,
and that evening Governor Roosevelt was sworn in
as President of the United States.</p>
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