The South Unit Scenic Loop officially reopened to visitors in late November following $51 million of repairs, in time for the ...
A look back at local, national and world events through Deseret News archives. On Jan. 6, 1919, former President Theodore Roosevelt died in his sleep in Oyster Bay, New York, at age 60. That he was so ...
On both a personal and a policy level, Theodore Roosevelt was a philo-semite. He admired the Maccabees, Jewish warriors who established an independent Jewish kingdom, and had Jews among his company ...
The Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge on the Indian River Lagoon in East Central Florida became the first national wildlife refuge.
DICKINSON — During his second year as president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt issued this Thanksgiving Proclamation, which was reproduced in the November 7, 1903 issue of The Dickinson ...
The White River National Forest, a sprawling expanse of peaks, valleys, and rivers nestled within the Colorado Rockies, stands as a living testament to the conservation vision of President Theodore ...
December 10, 1906. President Theodore Roosevelt became the first American to win a Nobel Prize. He received the peace prize ...
This proclamation was issued by Theodore Roosevelt just weeks after President William McKinley died, on Sept. 14, 1901, of wounds inflicted by an assassin a week earlier. In the week after the attack, ...
In October of 1919, the Roosevelt Memorial Association produced a film titled “Through the Roosevelt Country with Roosevelt’s ...
In 1918, Theodore Roosevelt penned an editorial in the Kansas City Star in which he described the role of the president as “merely the most important among a large number of public servants.” He also ...
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. In 1904, Charles Lang Freer offered ...