Category Archives: Thought of the Day

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky 11.6.13 Thought of the Day

“Truly there would be reason to go mad were it not for music.” — Tchiakovsky

Deutsch: Pjotr I. Tschaikowski

Deutsch: Pjotr I. Tschaikowski (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky died on this day in St. Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.

He was born Pyotr Tchaikovsky in Votkinsk, Vyatka Guberniya, Russia on April 23, 1840.

His father, Ilya Petrovich Tchaikovsky, was a mining engineer who was the manager of the Kamsko-Votkinsk Ironworks. His mother, Alexandra, was Ilya Petrovich’s second wife.  She was Russian of French descent. Alexandra was 18  years  younger than Ilya Petrovich.  Both his parents were artistic and musical.

He received piano lessons from a freed serf, beginning at the age of five, and within a few months he was already proficient in Friedrich Kalkbrenner’s composition Le Fou. [New World Encylopedia.org]

The Tchiakovskys moved to St. Petersburg In 1850 and Peter attended the School of Jurisprudence. He continued to study piano. His mother’s death (from cholera) while his was away at school was one of the most devastating events of his life. He wrote one of his first real compositions, a waltz, in her memory.

Tchaikovsky left school in 1858 and received employment as an under-secretary at the Ministry of Justice at the time when the Ministry was drafting legislation for emancipation of the serfs and implementation of various reforms. [Ibid]

He longed to further his musical studies, but hesitated giving up his secure position at the Ministry. In 1862, with his father’s permission (and promise of financial support) he enrolled at the new St Petersburg Conservatory where he studied “harmony, counterpoint and the fugue… instrumentation and composition” [Ibid]

Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (184...

Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840–1893) as a young man – Picture from 1874. Italiano: Il compositore russo Piotr Ilič Čaikovskij (1840–1893) da giovane (1874). Deutsch: Der junge Tschaikowski – Bild um 1874 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In 1865, after graduating from the Conservatory he secured a post as “professor of harmony, composition, and the history of music” at the Moscow Conservatory. Besides teaching he continued to compose and added music criticism to CV. Teaching proved to much for him and he suffered a nervous break down in 1877.

The next several years were spent recovering and “wandering” (he toured Italy and Switzerland) before he landed at his sister Alexandra’s estate near Kiev. There he began to write and conduct for the orchestra.

In 1891 he had a triumphant tour America which included his May 5 performance of “Marche Solennelle on the opening night of New York’s Carnegie Hall.” [Ibid]

Here’s his Serenade for Strings in C:

Tchaikovsky died, like his mother before him, of cholera. The composer drank “contaminated water in a restaurant, well aware of the risk of drinking unboiled water during a cholera epidemic” [Ibid] on this date in 1893. He was 53 years old.

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Notable works include:

  • Swan Lake (Ballet) 1875-1876
  • The Sleeping Beauty (Ballet) 1888-1889
  • The Nutcracker (Ballet) 1891-1892
  • Eugene Onegin (Opera) 1877-1878
  • The Maid of Orleans (Opera) 1878-1879
  • Iolanthe (Opera) 1891
  • Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture (Orchestral) 1869
  • 1812 Overture (Orchestral) 1880
  • Symphony  1- 7 and Concertos

Couldn’t do Tchaikovsky with out this…


Muffin Monday — Hearty Cranberry Muffins

Finished Cranberry Muffins

Finished Cranberry Muffins

INGREDIENTS:

3 cups Whole Wheat Flour

1 cup Buck Wheat Flour

3 tablespoons Wheat Bran

1 1/3 cups Brown Sugar

2 teaspoons of Salt

1 teaspoon Cinnamon

1 teaspoon Ginger

2 teaspoons Lemon or Orange Peel

2 cups chopped fresh Cranberries

1 1/3 cup Almond Milk

1/2 cup melted Butter

1 tablespoon Hazelnut Syrup (or Almond Extract)

2 large Eggs

DIRECTIONS:

1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees, and prep muffin cups with cooking spray.

2. Chop the fresh Cranberries and put in a bowl of cold water. [This causes the tiny seeds to sink to the bottom and the fruit to float to the top. Use your fingers to swish around the fruit to dislodge any stuborn seeds. Then use a slotted spoon to scoop off the fruit. Opt: strain the juice, add a teaspoon of sugar and ice for a Cranberry cocktail. Discard the seeds.]

Chopped cranberries in cold water.

Chopped cranberries in cold water.

3. In a large bowl combine all the dry ingredients … Whole Wheat Flour, Buck Wheat Flour, Wheat Bran, Brown Sugar, Salt, Cinnamon, Ginger, and Lemon Peel.

4. Gently stir in the Cranberries. Set aside.

5. In a smaller bowl combine the Milk, Melted Butter, Hazelnut Syrup and Eggs.

6. Mix the liquid ingredients into the dry and mix well.

7. Fill the muffin cups (but don’t over fill them).

Cranberry Muffins ready for the oven.

Cranberry Muffins ready for the oven.

8. Bake for 25 minutes or until muffins pass the toothpick test. Let cool a few minutes before removing from muffin cups.


“Fall”ing in love

The leaves are turning and starting to fall in my part of the world so we took a car trip to catch some color. The weather was perfect and the sky was an amazing blue.

Sunday country drive through South Central Pennsylvania.

Sunday country drive through South Central Pennsylvania.

We came to York Furnace and Indian Bridge Park and got out to stretch our legs and I took a 360 of the view…

180 looking over the water to the trees beyond.

180 looking over the water to the trees beyond.

I used my Iphone camera with the HDR on. Then I combined the images in Photoshop. I like how you can tell where one photo starts / ends. And left that in on purpose.

180 looking back at the shore and boat ramp.

180 looking back at the shore and boat ramp.

That’s about it for this little journey.

Are the leaves turning where you live? What’s your favorite thing about fall?


Secondary Character: The Beast, Beauty and the Beast

Advertisement for Beauty and the Beast

Advertisement for Beauty and the Beast (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

WHO: The Beast

 

FROM: Beauty and the Beast (Disney version)

 

BY: Linda Woolverton, Roger Allersetal et al — Writers      Alan Menken — Music, Howard Ashman — Lyrics.

 

WHEN RELEASED: 1991

 

PROS: Under his furry, grumpy exterior he’s really a kind, warm person.

 

CONS: he’s hot-tempered and tends toward self loathing and self-pity. At the beginning of the tale he was also selfish, vain, and judged other by the way they looked.

 

BEST SHINING MOMENT: Letting Belle go to her father even though it means he’ll always be a Beast.

 

LEAST SHINING MOMENT: Imprisoning Maurice.

Blu-ray Diamond edition cover

WHY I CHOOSE HIM: I like the Beast’s story arch. He learns something in the course of 84 minutes that changed how he saw himself and how he saw the world. He learned to love, and was willing to let that love go if it meant her happiness.

Honestly I didn’t need the last five minutes of the show. I’m glad [SPOILER ALERT] Belle saved his life.  But for me he could have stayed in Beast form. He’d already proven that he was beautiful on the inside. He didn’t need to transform outwardly. BUT I do think the absolute glee that he feels for his friends after their transformation is a lovely touch.

 

I’m somewhat jaded when it comes to Disney. It seems that the Mouse is rather ham-fisted in the way it monopolizes children’s entertainment. They often opt for a watered down, sugared up, “what-will-sell-best” version of a story over the original classic (Winnie the Pooh, anyone?) But with Beauty and the Beast they got it right. It’s not the original French fairytale, but it is a lovely version of the story and it is told with depth and … well… beauty.

A frame from the famous "Beauty and the B...

A frame from the famous “Beauty and the Beast” ballroom dance sequence. Using Disney’s CAPS software, the traditionally animated characters of Belle and the Beast are combined with a rendered computer-generated background to give the illusion of a dollying film camera. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The movie was the first animated featured film ever nominated for an Oscar. Although it didn’t win Best Picture, Beauty and the Beast did win Best Original Score and Best Original Song.  It was made into a Broadway musical  in 1994.


UnEnchanted — The demise of Baltimore’s Enchanted Forest Amusement Park

Old King Cole pointed the way to adventure... Now he points the way to high finance.

Old King Cole pointed the way to adventure… Now he points the way to high finance.

Thank god the Enchanted Forest is being plowed under to make way for a bank! Because, really what the world needs more of is less creative, imaginative play spaces and more banks… and pharmacies. We just don’t have enough of either of those.

Why, just the other day I was looking out the car window and thinking “you know what I haven’t seen in the last 2 blocks? A bank or a pharma — no wait there’s one. And there’s another. And another…”

Hmmmmmmm I guess we’re actually pretty good at the bank-to-people / pharmacy-to-people ratio after all. [I know they are necessary establishments, but I just don’t think we need to pave every bit of green space and convert every park to build one. Enough with the Bank/Pharmacy arms race, already. I think we know who already won.]

What we don’t have enough of are places where people (especially little people) can explore their imaginations and get lost in their creative whims.

Enchanted_Forest_Map medium

That’s what the Enchanted Forest was. It was a “Storybook land where fairy tales came true!” (according to a vintage ad for the theme park.) I know that was the case for this little 1960s era Baltimorean girl.

The once popular 20-acre theme park located at the corner of Route 40 and Bethany Lane hosted families for decades after opening in August of 1955. [Ellicott City Patch.com]

The Rainbow slide

The Rainbow Slide

For just $2.55 admission per person your family could explore the park all day. The rides, like the Mother Goose “train” were $.40 a piece. There were things to look at  (story book tableaux any one?) and things to do (like the awesome Rainbow Slide.)

The Mother Goose ride. I always wanted to ride on the cute little baby black duck in the back. He was the BEST!

The Mother Goose ride. I always wanted to ride on the cute little baby black duck in the back. He was the BEST!

Alas, the drawbridge entrance to the Enchanted Forest was closed for the last time in 1989 when a developer bought the property and built a shopping center on part of the lot.  “There were attempts to re-open the theme park in the 90s, and a community-led effort to preserve the fiberglass structures at the site in the woods fell short.” [Ibid]

Entropy and greed are evidently more powerful than the magic of childhood.

Restored crooked house at Coates Farm

Restored crooked house at Clark’s Elioak Farm

Some of the buildings and iconic statues were saved. The good folks at Clark’s Elioak Farm (not far from Enchanted Forest’s Ellicott City location) acquired dozens of them

In 2005, the owners of the property, Kimco, agreed to allow many of the structures to be moved to Clark’s Elioak Farm in Ellicott City. Clark’s, with the help of community members, hauled items including Mother Goose, Papa Bear, the giant Mushrooms, the Gingerbread Man, Wille the Whale, the Little Red Schoolhouse and many others to the farm, where they are now maintained and preserved.[Ibid]

But others languished beside and behind the strip mall. Unfortunately the amusement park seemed to have used “First Little Pig Building and Supply Co.” when it constructed the buildings, and the  modern day equivalent to the pig’s straw house, fiberglass, is just not holding up. They are all suffering from neglect and age. And the mightiest of them all, Cinderella’s castle is crumbling.

My childhood dreams... literally crumbling.

My childhood dreams… literally crumbling. Cinderella’s Castle, as viewed from the front, circa 1970; and from the back, circa 2009.

The most depressing 9 minutes and 28 seconds of my day was watching this YouTube Video showing what the Enchanted Forest looks like now…

But  then I found this site that shows the work being done at Clark Elioak farms …

http://www.clarklandfarm.com/CEF%20EF%20Moving%20to%20the%20Farm.htm

…and a little flower of hope blossomed inside me.

The Three Bears House is one of the newest rescued houses from the Enchanted Forest now at Clark's Elioak Farm.

The Three Bears House is one of the newest rescued houses from the Enchanted Forest now “living” at Clark Elioak Farm.

Gate Castels

The entrance to the Enchanted Forest and the new entrance to Clark Elioak Farms.

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Please note: None of the photos on this post are mine. I found them on Pinterest. Alas they did not have identification. If you see  YOUR photo I would be very happy to give your credit. (Or, if you wish, remove it from the post.)


Frank Lloyd Wrights Allen-Lambe House

Today is John Adam’s birthday so you really should revisit my John Adam’s blog (Part 1 and Part 2) to celebrate this great American President.

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Planters along the edge of the Allen-Lambe property line.

Planters /fence along the edge of the Allen-Lambe property line.

My copy of the Frank Lloyd Wright Field Guide lists two FLLW buildings for the state of Kansas, the Corbin Educational Center (built as the Juvenile Cultural Center in 1957) and the beautiful Allen-Lambe House.

The Allen-Lambe House was built in 1917. Wright considered it one of his best houses, and it the last of his Prairie Houses to be occupied (by its original owners.) It was commissioned by Henry Allen, a successful newspaper man and single term  Governor of Kansas and his wife Elsie Nuzman Allen a socialite and arts activist.

The house is at the corner of 2nd and Roosevelt streets.

The house is at the corner of 2nd and Roosevelt streets.

Designs and drawings on the house began in 1915 and the Allens moved in by 1918. They lived there until 1947.

The Allen-Lambe House is located at 255 North Roosevelt Street, in the northwest portion of Wichita, Kansas. The site is approximately one acre of flat land in a residential neighborhood on a corner lot. The house is a two-story Prairie-style home with a partial basement…. Mr. Wright designed the house in a L-shape for privacy purposes. There is a courtyard on the north side of the main section of the house, which is enclosed by the building on the south and east, by a garden teahouse on the west, and by a brick wall on the north. Even though the house is very open, it is well protected from neighbors by the L-shaped plan and the garden wall that runs parallel to the street. [eakpersectivedesign.weebly.com]

Floor plan (including garden and tea house.) The planters are on the right. [Image courtesy:

Floor plan (including garden and tea house.) The planters are on the right. [Image courtesy: eaksperspectivedesign.weebly.com]

Governor Allen must have been a pretty strong-willed man.  He held Wright and the construction crew firm to the original budget of $30,000. (Not something that happened often with Wright’s houses.) The house, which came with a built-in vacuum system and a security system had an additional $6,500 budget for custom furniture.  He also got Wright to include two items that the architect notoriously despised, a basement and a garage.  Wright thought both promoted clutter.

2 story wing of the Allen-Lambe house.

The 2 story wing of the Allen-Lambe house. (Right side of the Floor plan)

Wright specified the following materials for the construction of the Allen house:

INSIDE:

  • Oak wood (for the trim)
  • Red quarry tile
  • Red gum wood
  • Brick
  • Copper (for the sinks)
  • Marble

OUTSIDE:

  • Brick
  • Clay tile (for the roof — He wanted to
    create an Asian feel, as an omage to
    the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo he was working on
    at the time)
  • Marble

The materials reflected the local landscape. Bringing the outside INSIDE was very much on Wrights mind.

The walls are a gold color, the ceilings are a hazy blue color to make you feel like you are outside, and the ledges underneath the ceilings are a green color, which is suppose to make you feel like you are standing under trees. [eakpersectivedesign.weebly.com

A tile flooring flows from the terrace into the living room and dining room. The only things separating the indoor space from the outdoor space are glass doors.

Views to the exterior are through “light screens” which consist of clear glass doors and windows with terminal windows or side windows framing the views to nature with art glass. Exterior window flower boxes raise the prairie floor up to establish a strong visual relationship to nature.  [Onemain.com]

The Allen-Lambe house is open to the public on a limited basis. Tours are by appointment and must be arranged 10 days in advance of your visit. Call 1-316-687-1027 to book a tour. ($10 per guest.) Guest must be 16 years old and up. And each tour must be between 5 and 20 people. Can’t book a tour?  Consider a walk by. The exterior is easily seen from the street.

Another angle of the house. (Garden side)

Another angle of the house. (Garden side)

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Thanks to my husband, Bill for going out of his way to take all the original photos in this post and feeding my love of all things FLLW.

If you like the Allen-Lambe house you might want to check out another lovely Prairie style home we visited, the Martin House, it is in Buffalo, New York.


Open Letter to the Residents of WuHu Island

This blog relates to Wii Fit Plus. If you don’t know anything about that ‘verse you may not understand what I’m writing about. My apologies.

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Parade

Dear Residents of WuHu Island,

Thank you for allowing me to use your excellent sports facilities for the last two years. I truly appreciate your enthusiasm for my fitness program. With the exception of a certain boxing instructor I have always found you to be 100% supportive in my training efforts. And I  appreciate your ever cheering, ever smiling faces.

So I want to sincerely apologize for a couple of things…

  1. I’m  sorry for monopolizing the Island’s only bike. On an island so obsessed with fitness I’m kinda surprised that there IS only one bike, but really I SHOULD be more considerate about the amount of time I spend on it.
  2. I’m really sorry about the number of times I’ve crashed said bike. But, I’m a push-the-boundaries kind of Mii, I want to see if nudging the bike off a cliff will kill me or take me to a short cut  to another path. Also some times I’m not that good at riding the bike.
  3. O.K. … You know how some times I’m not really good at riding the bike? That is especially true when I’m ride up a hill at full tilt. I do the ole zig-zag maneuver and some times, when one of you fine people are in the way, you, um, fall off the road. So I’m really sorry about that.
  4. And I’m really, really sorry that I keep killing all your dogs. They are such wonderful, intelligent creatures. They are so helpful in my quest for flags and giant balloon/balls. But when I make a dangerous maneuver (like taking a ramp over water)… well… Fido doesn’t make it. I’m a Mii dog killer, and I’m not proud.
Look out little doggie.

Look out little doggie.

Now that I’ve gotten that off my chest I have a few things I want to ask.

1. Why do you have protective railings on about 25% of roadways but not on the other 75%? Did you just run out of money?

2. If you can mow the grass on  a mountain side into the fancy pattern worthy of a major league ball park, why can’t I bike or hike up the same mountainside?

Beautifully manicured grass is NOT always greener on WuHu Island.

The beautifully manicured grass is NOT always greener on WuHu Island.

3. When I do a long run around the back of the Island a pack of little dogs jump off a cliff and land happily on the tarmac in front on me then scamper away. But when I’m on the bike and try jumping off the same cliff I plunge to my death. Why does gravity work differently for dogs than it does for girls on bikes?

4. Why does a jumps from one cliff result in a short cut while jump/fall from another, much shorter, cliff result in death? Who are you Mii gods? Why  do you mess with my Mii mind?

5. What is the purpose of the PIT at the ancient ruins? Is it just to trip me up? If so, well played, sir, well played.

4. And most importantly where the heck did this van come from? And what is it doing in the WuHu village? (Yes, some times I play this game just to make sure the van is still there.)

Car

See you tomorrow,

Sincerely,

Your friend

Mii Rita

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Nintendo is coming out with Wii Fit U next month! It promises a bunch of new games and a new  Wii Fit Meter.

[All the above images are courtesy Nintendo, taken from my screen]

Wii Mii

Wii Mii (Photo credit: jayneandd)


Muffin Monday: Pumpkin Muffins

I’ve been thinking about Pumpkin Muffins since the magical orange orbs started to appear at the Farmer’s Market. The other day I gave in and bought a can of pumpkin puree.

Plain Pumpkin muffins and Raisin enhanced Pumpkin muffins sit side by side in harmony on my mini cutting board.

Plain Pumpkin muffins and Raisin enhanced Pumpkin muffins sit side by side in harmony on my mini cutting board.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 3 cups White Whole Wheat Flour
  • 1 teaspoon Nutmeg
  • 1 teaspoon Garam masala
  • 2 teaspoons Cinnamon
  • 2 teaspoons Baking Soda
  • 2 teaspoons Salt
  • 3 Cups Sugar
  • 1 can Pumpkin Puree
  • 4 Eggs
  • 1/2 cup Vegetable Oil
  • 1/2 cup Apple Cider
  • 1/2 raisins (optional)
  • 1 tablespoon Sugar (for topping optional)

DIRECTIONS

1.  Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Prep 24 muffin cups by spraying with baking spray

2. In a medium bowl combine the Flour, spices, Baking Soda and Salt.

3. In a large bowl mix Pumpkin, Sugar, Eggs, Oil and Apple Cider.

4. Add the dry ingredients to the Pumpkin mixture. Beat until well combined.

5. Divide evenly into the 24 muffin cups.

This recipe makes 24 muffins. (Please admire my new heart shaped silicone muffin cups.)

This recipe makes 24 muffins. (Please admire my new heart shaped silicone muffin cups.)

6. If you want a special treat you can add Raisins — Toss the Raisins and the tablespoon of sugar together in the dry ingredient bowl. Spoon onto the tops of the muffins. (I did half and half).

7. Bake for 25  to 30 minutes or until muffins pass the toothpick test. Cool 10 minutes then remove from muffin cups.

And here's what they looked like when they came out of the oven.

And here’s what they looked like when they came out of the oven.

Enjoy!

2 muffins


Theodore Roosevelt 10.27.13 Thought of the Day

President of the United States Theodore Roosev...

President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing front. Deutsch: Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919), Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten von 1901 bis 1909, Friedensnobelpreisträger des Jahres 1906. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.”

Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. was  born on this day in New York City, New York, USA in 1858. Today is the 155th Anniversary of his birth.
He was the second of four children born to Martha “Mittie” and Theodore “Thee” Roosevelt, Sr. The wealthy family lived in a fashionable brownstone in the Gramercy neighborhood of New York.
Young Teddy or “Teedie” was a sickly boy. He had severe asthma and had to sleep propped up on pillows. He was…
homeschooled due to his illnesses and asthma. This gave him the opportunity to nurse his passion for animal life, but by his teens, with the encouragement of his father, whom he revered, Theodore developed a rigorous physical routine that included weightlifting and boxing. [Biography.com]
He was always fascinated by animals. Once, when he was 7,  he saw a dead seal at the market. He managed to get the seal’s head and it became the founding exhibit in the “Roosevelt Museum of Natural History”, an institution the boy started with two of his cousins. He took to taxidermy and collected other specimens for the museum.
Teedie collected everything within his reach and range of vision, and begged friends and family to bring him any specimens they found. He even paid other children to collect specimens for him. Yet he generously shared his collection. In 1871, he donated several specimens to another fledgling museum — the American Museum of Natural History, which had been co-founded by his father. [PBS.org]
He was a good student especially in geography, history, biology, French and German. But he did not do as well in Latin, Greek and math.
Roosevelt entered Harvard in 1876. He studied natural history. His father died when Teddy was a sophomore. While the tragedy broke his heart, it also spurred him on to work harder than ever before, both physically and academically.
After graduating magna cum laude in 1880, he enrolled at Columbia Law School and got married to Alice Hathaway Lee of Massachusetts. [Biography.com]
He dropped out of Columbia the following year when he had the chance to run for the New York State Assembly. He won the election…
becoming the youngest to serve in that position. Not long after, Roosevelt was speeding through various public service positions, including captain of the National Guard and minority leader of the New York Assembly. [Ibid]
His meteoric  rise to fame came to a halt on Valentine’s Day 1884. Both Roosevelt’s wife and his beloved mother died on the same day in his house. His wife died of undiagnosed Bright’s disease (kidney failure), his mother or Typhoid Fever. Roosevelt escaped the city and headed west. He worked for two years as a cowboy and rancher in the Dakota Territory before returning to New York.
NYPD Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt in 1895

NYPD Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt in 1895 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In 1886 he ran for unsuccessfully for mayor of New York. He married again, this time to Edith Kermit Carow (a life long friend.)

Roosevelt soon resumed his career trajectory, first as a civil service commissioner, then as a New York City police commissioner and U.S. Navy assistant secretary under President William McKinley…in the Spanish-American War… He organized a volunteer cavalry known as the Rough Riders, which he led in a bold charge up San Juan Hill in the Battle of San Juan Heights, in 1898. A war hero, and nominated for the Congressional Medal of Honor, Roosevelt was elected governor of New York in 1898.. [Ibid]

He ran with President McKinley on the Republican ticket during the 1900 national elections. They won and McKinley began his second term in the White House. But then an anarchist shot McKinley on September 6, 1901  at the Pan-American Exposition. Although McKinley seemed to recover for a while he eventually died of his injuries and Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th, and youngest, President of the United States of America.

As President, Roosevelt held the ideal that the Government should be the great arbiter of the conflicting economic forces in the Nation, especially between capital and labor, guaranteeing justice to each and dispensing favors to none… Roosevelt emerged spectacularly as a “trust buster” by forcing the dissolution of a great railroad combination in the Northwest. Other antitrust suits under the Sherman Act followed….Roosevelt steered the United States more actively into world politics. He liked to quote a favorite proverb, “Speak softly and carry a big stick. . . . ” [WhiteHouse.gov]

Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United St...

Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States of America. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Highlights of Teddy Roosevelt’s presidency include:

  • Completed the Panama Canal
  • Won the Nobel Peace Prize for mediating the Russo-Japanese War.
  • Established (or added to) National Forest and parks for public use.
  • Other conservation projects

He left the White House in 1909 when his friend and former Secretary of War William Howard Taft became President. Roosevelt went on Safari in Africa for two years. When he returned to the States he was unhappy with the job Taft was doing and he decided to run again for office. Since Taft had the Republican ticket, Roosevelt started his own party, the  Bull Moose Party.

While delivering a speech on the campaign trail, Roosevelt was shot in the chest in an assassination attempt by John Nepomuk Schrank. Shockingly, he continued his speech for 90 minutes before seeing a doctor, later chalking up the incident to the hazards of the business. Roosevelt lost to Woodrow Wilson in the 1912 election, in a rather close popular vote. [Biography.com]

Roosevelt retired from politics again. He traveled to South America. He wrote books (25). And when the US entered World War I he volunteered to head a “division for service in France” [Ibid] (Wilson declined.)

Roosevelt died in his sleep on January 6, 1919, at his Long Island estate, Sagamore Hill.

Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United St...

Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States of America. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)