THE MANY FACES OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT.

AuthorGable, John Allen
PositionBrief Article

"Roosevelt, who preached and practiced the `strenuous life,' was admired and is remembered not only for his achievements as a statesman, but for being a heroic human being."

ONE COULD ARGUE that Theodore Roosevelt basically invented, or at least drew up the blueprints for, what came to be called the American Century. From 1901 to 1909, Roosevelt, the youngest president in history, brought the Federal government into the marketplace and the workplace, fathered conservation and a modern navy, built the Panama Canal, won the Nobel Peace Prize, and preached from the "bully pulpit" of the presidency the doctrines of the "square deal" in domestic policy and "speak softly and carry a big stick" in foreign affairs. He created in those years what political scientists call the modern presidency.

Later, as the aging Bull Moose Progressive, Roosevelt became the thundering prophet of the welfare state and democratic nationalism through championing such reforms as the presidential primary system, votes for women, and Social Security insurance to guard against the "hazards of sickness, accident, invalidism, involuntary unemployment, and old age." In short, it is hard to overestimate his importance in seeing and setting the course the country followed in the 20th century.

So much for Roosevelt the statesman. To understand his full significance, it also is necessary to consider the fact that Roosevelt was and is an American hero and icon. He was the frail, asthmatic boy who conquered his own body; the dude from the East who lived the fantasy of being a cowboy in the Wild West; the fearless hunter of grizzly bears and lions; the colonel of the Rough Riders leading the charge in the Battle of San Juan Hill; and the leader who survived a would-be assassin's bullet in the chest and made his scheduled speech. Roosevelt, who preached and practiced the "strenuous life," was admired and is remembered not only for his achievements as a statesman, but for being a heroic human being.

Consider this statement by John Hay, Roosevelt's Secretary of State (and in his youth a secretary to Abraham Lincoln), speaking about the President's political...

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