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cover of episode The Progressive Era | In the Arena | 6

The Progressive Era | In the Arena | 6

2025/6/11
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American History Tellers

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B
Bami
E
Edward O'Keefe
L
Lindsey Graham
T
Theodore Roosevelt
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Theodore Roosevelt: 我在警察局的工作改革受阻,且受到 Tammany Hall 的敌意,这让我感到沮丧。如果我是唯一的警察局长,我可以在几年内清理整个地方。现在的情况就像试图驾驶一艘没有舵的船。我曾在初选中支持 McKinley 的对手,如何才能让他喜欢我?海军助理部长听起来不错。 Bami: 现在总统选举正在进行,这可能是一个出路。如果 McKinley 赢得选举,你可以去华盛顿,获得真正有权力的职位。邀请 Storer 议员夫妇到 Sagamore Hill,他们是 McKinley 的朋友,如果有人能铺平道路...海军助理部长很适合你,让我们实现它。你知道你的兄弟不适合委员会会议室和追逐签名,他是一个行动派,天生就是领导者,你决心规划他的上升之路。 Edward O'Keefe: 镀金时代正在取代维多利亚时代,整个国家正在从农业社会转变为工业社会,科技正在彻底颠覆美国人的生活。罗斯福家族很富有,但不如 Rockefeller 或 Morgan 或 Vanderbilt 或 Carnegie。他的父亲主要是一位慈善家。Alice Hathaway Lee 是罗斯福进步主义中一个动态的转折点,她来自波士顿婆罗门最杰出的家庭之一,Lee、Cabot 和 Saltonstall 家族在谈论政治改革。1881 年,西奥多·罗斯福当选为纽约州议会议员,他看到了贿赂,老板制度和政治机器的力量。他亲眼目睹了这些孩子和家人一起卷雪茄,他开始看到纽约市的不同一面。他反对这个制度,他作为一个改革者,真正试图带来改变。西奥多·罗斯福没有权力单独行动,他通过他的妹妹 Bami 的帮助,引起了人们对腐败的关注。他有争议地执行了周日关闭法,他说我们需要有标准、制度和实践来保护人民,他不允许腐败,他不允许政治老板利用人民。他太出名了,他们无法阻止他,他在美西战争中冲上了圣胡安高地。Richard Harding Davis 记录了 Rough Riders 及其大胆的英雄事迹。在六个月的时间里,他从海军助理部长变成了州长,每个人都认为他疯了。他加入了由牛仔、牧场主、职业网球运动员组成的杂牌军,从那次经历来看,他几乎是不可阻挡的,老板们非常警惕他。公司掌握着所有的权力,尽管西奥多·罗斯福很受欢迎,但他只赢了 18,000 票。他是一位改革思想的州长,在纽约的冬天,他将军械库改造成无家可归者的住所,他利用监管和税收政策来发挥自己的优势。罗斯福支持一项法案,该法案将限制和征收控制地铁、桥梁和隧道的公司的利润,共和党的老板们讨厌这一点,他们称他为男孩州长。根深蒂固的政党机构通过一种不寻常的策略反击,提升了他,他们把他踢到了楼上,他们所能做的最好的事情就是说,我们不支持罗斯福州长竞选连任,我们需要让他成为副总统。Hanna 对 McKinley 说,如果你把罗斯福放在选票上,总统职位和这个疯子之间就会有一条生命。突然有了一个地方可以安置来自纽约的这个麻烦制造者。罗斯福说,我将执行 William McKinley 的政府,他开始倡导一个真正具有改革思想的总统职位,那时没有食品和药品保护,当时,江湖郎中用止痛糖浆或吗啡和可卡因来治疗婴儿的绞痛,罗斯福总统在一次可怕的事故中,被开了可卡因作为治疗方法,没有疫苗强制令,没有肉类包装行业标准,今天存在的所有保护措施都始于罗斯福总统的改革时刻。铁路正在合并,自然会带来更高的费率,罗斯福使用了 1890 年的《谢尔曼反垄断法》,罗斯福阻止了一家主要铁路公司的合并,因为他担心合并实际上会造成垄断,并且不会为美国人民带来更好的服务或更好的价格,股票下跌了,他们称西奥多·罗斯福为金融界的 Rough Rider,参议院的地板上因为这项政策发生了拳脚相加,他攻击了牛肉托拉斯,他攻击了食糖托拉斯,1902 年、1903 年,煤炭是王者,宾夕法尼亚州发生了无烟煤矿工罢工,工人想要更高的工资、更安全的工作条件和更短的工作日,矿主铁路公司被迫在西奥多·罗斯福的命令下与工会领导人在白宫会面,西奥多·罗斯福是第一位干预劳工罢工的总统,此后重置了总统、劳工和公司之间的关系,因为人们突然看到一位总统承认他们的利益,而不仅仅是那些控制经济的人的利益。总统职位是一个讲坛,这是西奥多·罗斯福的发明,他明白,如果他在周日宣布某件事,它会在周一占据报纸的头条,并且会成为整周的谈话话题,他利用自己作为总统的地位和权力来了解如何直接与人民沟通,西奥多·罗斯福了解新闻和报纸的节奏和步伐,他的妹妹康妮给了他很多帮助,她实际上充当了他的新闻秘书,当时还没有这个职位,如果美国人民爱上了罗斯福一家,他就会在完成他的政策方面取得更大的成功,人们对这个非常活跃、喧闹、充满活力的家庭感到着迷。西奥多·罗斯福发布的行政命令比之前所有总统加起来还要多,他了解行政部门的权力,讲坛的权力,直接与人民沟通的权力,让他们爱上你和你的家人,并主导新闻周期,不允许任何人获得大部分的关注,这样他就可以推动他的议程向前发展。罗斯福实际上是那些默默无闻的非凡女性的产物,他的母亲 Mitty 对他影响很大,她实际上是他小时候读的书的来源,他的第一任妻子 Alice 影响了他的进步观点,他的第二任妻子 Edith 是他的童年恋人,在 Alice 去世后又回来了,她基本上是他的伴侣,她更善于判断人品,她被一致认为是导航政治的更好指南针。罗斯福的姐姐 Bami 就像 Robert F. Kennedy 对 John F. Kennedy 一样,罗斯福将每一个重大决定都告诉 Bami,她就国家事务向他提供建议,她的家被称为小白宫,罗斯福的女儿 Alice 认为,如果 Bami 是一个男人,她而不是西奥多·罗斯福会成为美国总统,Eleanor Roosevelt 同意,如果 Bami 是一个男人,如果她晚生一百年,她而不是西奥多·罗斯福会成为美国总统。他保护了超过 2 亿英亩的公共土地,他对自然的热爱来自北达科他州的荒地和他的童年,罗斯福在北达科他州购买了牛,他在那里当了牧场主和牛仔将近两年,他的第一任妻子 Alice 和他的母亲 Mitty 在同一天在同一所房子里去世,他没有竞选连任纽约州议会议员,他去了荒地的自然环境,他很沮丧,他不知道接下来要做什么,他过着他后来称之为艰苦的生活,Elkhorn 牧场被称为保护的摇篮,在荒地的美丽中,他发现并加深了他的保护精神,他看到了物种的退化,他意识到自然的多样性正在被猖獗的商业主义践踏,他真的认为,如果他有能力这样做,就需要做一些事情,一旦他这样做了,他就真的有所作为了。他是保护总统,因为他觉得他需要展望未来 100 年,并为我们的孩子和我们孩子的孩子保护土地、鸟类和物种,这在当时并不是一个受欢迎的观点,当他提出他的第一个保护概念时,众议院议长说不会有一分钱用于风景,没有人反对保护,因为作为一个概念,特别是在政治意义上,没有人考虑过它。西奥多·罗斯福在 1903 年对西部各州进行了巡视,他在黄石公园徒步旅行和露营,他实际上和 John Burroughs 一起滑雪,他称 John Burroughs 为 Um Nguyen,他继续前往加利福尼亚,在那里他遇到了博物学家 John Muir,他和 John Muir 一起露营了三天,保护主义与进步主义有关,因为这是为了人民,美国的大教堂在自然界中,如果我们不保护它们,它们将被永远摧毁,它们应该属于所有的人民。一些最伟大的自然资源保护主义者是猎人,罗斯福小时候患有哮喘,无法外出探索伟大的户外,他通过书籍和动物标本制作来生活。 Lindsey Graham: 罗斯福是一位进步主义者,他相信政府在国内外的干预。罗斯福是一位进步主义者,他相信政府在国内外的干预。

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Imagine it's July 1896 in Oyster Bay, New York.

Your brother, Theodore Roosevelt, is rowing you in the waters of a cove near his home, Sagamore Hill. You tilt your parasol to block the morning sun as his oars slice through the shimmering water. His brow is furrowed and his jaw is clenched, but you can tell it's not just the strain of rowing. Oh, Theodore, you better tell me what's on your mind.

He slows his stroke and breathes a heavy sigh. It's this job. I work from dawn till dusk at the police board, but every reform I attempt is thwarted. Then I'm forced to endure the hostility of Tammany Hall, and the Republican bosses are hardly any better, let me tell you.

"'If only I were the city's sole police commissioner, "'I could clean up the whole cursed place within a few years. "'But instead, there's four of us. "'It's like trying to steer a rudderless ship. "'Rather, a ship with four rudders. "'Well, it sounds to me like you're an executive "'trapped in a bureaucratic role.'

Your brother snorts in agreement. And as you study his weary face, you're struck with an idea. You know, there may be a way out, now that the presidential election is in full swing. If McKinley wins, as I expect he will, there will be changes. New appointments. You could escape New York for Washington. Maybe get a role with real power. And how exactly do you suggest I endear myself to McKinley? I backed his opponent in the primary. Well, that was a miscalculation, but perhaps not an insurmountable one.

Theodore stops rowing and studies you. Yeah? What do you have in mind? You should invite Congressman Storer and his wife to Sagamore Hill. They're friends with McKinley, and if anyone could smooth the way... Oh, you're incorrigible. I'm strategic. Still, it's a big ask. And what role would McKinley even give me? He's certainly not going to put me in the cabinet. How about something in the military? Say, Assistant Secretary of the Navy.

Your brother leans back in his seat, considering. Uh, that could work. I've always said that naval power should be the backbone of our national security. We should be doing everything we can to protect our strength in the Caribbean. Precisely. It suits you. And I'd like to see what we could do to get Spain out of Cuba.

"'Yes. Assistant Secretary of the Navy. I do like the sound of that. Well, let's make it happen. Write to the storers at once, and have them come to Sagamore Hill in August. Let them see you and your element, and your men fences in no time.' "'Well, it's a plan, and I like it. What would I do without you?' You wink as he lifts the oars and resumes rowing. "'You know your brother wasn't meant for committee rooms and chasing signatures. He's a man of action, born to lead, and you're determined to chart the course of his ascent.'

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From Wondery, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is American History Tellers. Our history, your story. American History Tellers

In the summer of 1896, Theodore Roosevelt confided in his older sister, Bami, describing his frustrations with his position as one of four commissioners on the New York City Board of Police. Bami was Roosevelt's most trusted advisor, and she encouraged him to pursue a role in the administration of Republican presidential candidate William McKinley. In the wake of McKinley's victory, Bami's counsel and strategic maneuvering helped Roosevelt secure an appointment as Assistant Secretary of the Navy.

Roosevelt was a progressive who believed in government interventions at home and abroad, and in this role, he expanded U.S. naval power and paved the way for a future war in Cuba. Bamey helped orchestrate his rise in the federal government, and she would remain a close advisor for the next two decades of his political career.

Here with me now to discuss Theodore Roosevelt's power of personality and the ways in which the women in his life influenced his progressivism is Ed O'Keefe, Chief Executive Officer of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library Foundation and author of The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt, The Women Who Created a President. Edward O'Keefe, welcome to American History Tellers. Good to be with you. So Theodore Roosevelt became president in 1901.

How would you describe the economic and social climate in America at this time? Well, the Victorian age is giving way to the Gilded Age. This is the era of Rockefeller and Morgan, Vanderbilt and Carnegie. It's a really rupturous and fulcrum-changing time in the nation. The whole nation is changing from an agrarian to an industrial society.

You're seeing economic tumult. You're seeing changes in immigration, which is challenging the notion of what it is to be an American. Technology is completely uprooting American life. Theodore Roosevelt is born in 1858. There's no electricity, no cars, no air conditioning. Yet he'll be the first president to fly in an airplane, to be in a submarine, the first president to go in a presidential motorcade.

And so, you know, this is also a time when America is contemplating its place in the world, what America will be in relation to the rest of the world. As we say, the past is prologue. Everything that is happening then is, of course, happening again now.

Let's rewind a bit and investigate his family background. What were they like? Did he come from a prosperous, wealthy family? Theodore Roosevelt grew up wealthy, but he was not of the league of Rockefeller or Morgan or Vanderbilt or Carnegie. His dad was primarily a philanthropist. He worked in the family business, which was Roosevelt and Sons.

Roosevelt and Sons had gone back generations, but his grandfather, Theodore Roosevelt's grandfather, C.V.S. Roosevelt, is what vaulted the family to a new level of wealth. C.V.S. was actually one of the

original directors of Chemical Bank. And Chemical Bank eventually bought Chase Manhattan and Chase Manhattan became Chase. So if you go to a Chase Bank to this day, you are actually banking or working with an organization that was founded in part by Theodore Roosevelt's grandfather,

So they were in the import-export business. They did a lot of stained glass and luxury goods for the wealthiest families in primarily New York, but throughout America. And then that jump into investment banking really changed the fortunes of the Roosevelt family. So Theodore Roosevelt's father has the luxury of really working primarily in

as a philanthropist. He's the co-founder of the American Museum of Natural History. He's the founder of the first orthopedic hospital in New York, and he's one of the founders of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Theodore Roosevelt, at 10 years old, witnesses his father signing a

the Charter for the American Museum of Natural History. But his father, through his philanthropy, is exposing him to the newsboys lodging house, the orphans who are working primarily in the newspaper business. He's seen his father found these institutions like the American Museum of Natural History and the Met and a hospital for those who don't have the ability to care for themselves or have a

particular disability with regard to orthopedics. So he's from a privileged class, but he's getting exposure to worlds he doesn't live in. So that's his family and how perhaps that unique dynamic influenced him as he was growing up. But I'm also interested as a kind of a topic of your book, how did his wife's family influence him? Alice Hathaway Lee is

is the dynamic changing moment in Theodore Roosevelt's progressivism. Alice Hathaway Lee, Theodore Roosevelt met while he was at Harvard. He had unfortunately experienced the passing of his father. His father died of cancer relatively young at age 46.

Theodore Roosevelt was 20 years old at the time. And that same year, just a few months after his father died, he broke up with his long-term girlfriend, Edith Carreau, who will come back into the picture later. But at the moment, it was absolutely devastating. He loses his father. He loses his girlfriend in the course of a couple of months in 1878. He goes back to Harvard in his sophomore year, and there he meets Alice Hathaway Lee. She is beautiful.

beautiful. She is beguiling. She comes from one of the most prominent Boston Brahmin families.

If you know the old Boston toast, and this is good old Boston, the home of the bean in the cod, where the lolls talk only to the cabbots and the cabbots talk only to God. She's a cabbot. She's, you know, elusive and beautiful and comes from this progressive reform minded family. The Lees and the Saltonstalls and the cabbots are talking politics, but not just any type of politics. They're talking reform politics. So influential is Alistair.

Alice in TR's Outlook that his senior thesis at Harvard is an effusive, all-out call for equal rights for women. In 1880, Theodore Roosevelt writes that women should have the right to vote. That's 40 years before suffrage. He endorses women becoming lawyers, doctors, and judges. He

He says that women should not necessarily take their husband's name upon marriage. I mean, these are ideas that are far, far ahead of their time. And it's all really got that root in Alice Hathaway Lee and this progressive reform minded family around which Theodore Roosevelt is surrounded in college.

So in 1880, he writes a senior thesis that shows strong progressive flavors. And in 1901, he becomes president. But let's investigate that 21-year period in between. How did his progressive leanings begin to evolve in his public service and political careers? He was a New York assemblyman.

Yes. In 1881, Theodore Roosevelt is elected to the New York State Assembly. He was a Republican. He came from what was known as the Silk Stocking District. So not much was expected of this particular Republican. But when he got to Albany, he saw bribery. He saw the power of the boss system and the political machine. He was actually brought to

to one of the tenement houses by one of his fellow assemblymen when he opposed a bill at first to ban the making of cigars in private homes. And he saw, he witnessed these young children working with their families, rolling cigars, and it changed his outlook. He began to see that

a different side of New York City. He wasn't a radical reformer as an assemblyman, but he was beginning to see the challenges that the city and the state were facing. And it really kind of extended that spark that had been lit by the Lees, Cabot's and Saltonstalls that he was running against the system. He was running as a reformer to really try to see

change to bring regulation and rules and order and some role for government between capital and commerce and protection of the public good and the people. So we can roll forward a few years then and Teddy Roosevelt becomes police commissioner of New York City. How did his reform minded progressivism adapt to this new role?

So at that point, there wasn't just one police commissioner. There was a number of them. There would be three or four at any given time. And so Theodore Roosevelt didn't have the power to act exclusively. But what he could do through the help of his sister, Bami, who introduced him to a prominent journalist, Richard Harding Davis, was bring attention to the corruption that just completely corroded the New York police.

public police at that time. He would go on night rambles and bring Richard Harding Davis with him so he could catch the officers who were sleeping on the job, who were in saloons making trouble, who were not following any sort of the systems in order. And of course, this caused a huge ruckus. He also very

controversially enforced the Sunday closing laws. He didn't allow the service of alcohol on Sundays, which was technically illegal, but everyone ignored it because that was the one day a week that the laborers, the working class, had off.

But because it was against the law, Theodore Roosevelt enforced it. It did not make him a very popular figure, but it was one of those examples where he said we need to have standards and systems and practices for the protection of the people. Now, in these first few positions of authority that he has, he's

always running against the grain. He's not going to allow corruption. He's not going to allow the political bosses of the machine to take advantage of the people. And this is all, of course, leading up to when he'll really emerge as governor, vice president and president and make change for the nation. I'm glad you mentioned this because governor and vice president. Well, let's stick with governor for the moment.

This is a position that he achieved despite going against the grain of the existing entrenched political machinery. How does he achieve that? He was so famous they couldn't stop him. He had made the charge up San Juan Heights in the Spanish-American War. How did he become famous? Richard Harding Davis, the journalist that would follow him on the night rambles as police commissioner, shows up again. He catalogs the Rough Riders and their daring heroics.

in Cuba. T.R. dispatches for Cuba in May of 1898. By November of that year, he's elected governor. In the space of six months, what he called his crowded hour, he goes from a assistant secretary of the Navy who resigns his position. Everybody thinks he's insane for doing so. He's lost his mind. He's

and join a ragtag group of cowboys, ranchers, professional tennis players. I mean, it was the combination of the highest class and the lowest class fighting together. And from that experience, he's almost unstoppable. The bosses are very, very wary of him. He's always been an agitator and a reformer.

Can they control him as governor? And think about this when TR comes into office. He's elected in 1898. So it's around 60 to 70 million in the country. The top 9 percent

were responsible for 71% of the wealth. So it's a boiling, roiling kind of time where the population is out of sync with where the wealth of the nation is held. Corporations hold all the power. And it was an extraordinarily close election, despite Theodore Roosevelt's popularity and celebrity. He only won by 18,000 votes.

So he squeaks by and takes a seat as governor. How does he do? Well, he is indeed what the bosses feared. He is a reform minded governor. For instance, in the winter in New York, he repurposes the armories to house the homeless. He uses regulation and tax policy to his advantage.

TR gets behind a bill in the New York legislature as governor that will limit the duration and tax the profits of corporations that control the subways, the bridges and the tunnels. The Republican bosses in the system, the political machine hates this. They call him the boy governor. And one of his legislators actually comes to the governor and says of Boss Platt, who controls the Republican machine, he'll get you soon.

The entrenched party machinery strikes back, however, in an unusual maneuver by promoting him.

They kick him upstairs. The best that they could do was to say, you know what? We do not support Governor Roosevelt running for reelection. We need to make him vice president. Mark Hanna is a senator from Ohio. He's very close to William McKinley, the president who's standing for reelection. And interestingly, there wouldn't even be a spot on the ticket except for the death of the sitting vice president.

And suddenly there's a place to stick TR, this troublemaker from New York.

Hannah says to McKinley, don't you understand, President McKinley, if you put Roosevelt on the ticket, there will be one life between the presidency and this madman. When McKinley finally caves and agrees to take TR on the ticket because he's young, he's dynamic, it's Hannah who actually says to the President of the United States, William McKinley, your duty to the country is to live for the next four years. ♪

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Roosevelt becomes president in 1901 upon the assassination of President McKinley, but he was reelected in his own right in 1904. Let's talk about some of the reforms he pursued having his own mandate. We at this time did not have federal food, drug or meat inspection laws. So share with us a little bit about how President Roosevelt advocated for these reforms.

Well, he comes to the presidency, as you said, Lindsay, upon the assassination of William McKinley. Roosevelt says, I will carry out the administration of William McKinley. Well, he does that for about 30 seconds. He goes completely in the opposite direction of anything McKinley had outlined and begins to advocate a really, truly reform minded presidency. There are no protections there.

for food and drug. This is the time when you have soothsayers medicating with syrups for colicky babies or morphine and cocaine. I mean, when Theodore Roosevelt is in a terrible accident as president, he is prescribed cocaine as the cure. So...

if you ever wondered if the president of the United States has done cocaine, the answer is yes. It was Theodore Roosevelt while recovering from a disastrous accident. There's no vaccine mandates. There's no meatpacking industry standards. There's really none of the protections that exist today. They all begin at this moment of reform in TR's presidency. And how did he specifically advocate for them? How did he use the power of the presidency? Well,

Well, let's take the Northern Securities antitrust case, for instance. Basically, what was happening is the railroads were consolidating and they were naturally bringing higher rates. There was poorer service for more money. And so TR uses the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, which, to be fair, prior presidents had brought cases under the Antitrust Act, but they never succeeded.

And Theodore Roosevelt, for the first time in American history, is successful. He blocks the merger of a major railroad because he fears that the merger will actually create a monopoly and it will not lead to better service or better prices for the American people. Just so there's context right now, we look back on it and say, well, of course, I mean, the government routinely brings money.

antitrust cases for anti-monopoly purposes. They've done so throughout American history. Well, that was the first. Stocks fell. They called Theodore Roosevelt a financial rough rider. There were fistfights on the Senate floor over this policy. It was extraordinarily controversial.

And then he proceeded to do it again and again. So once it was successful on the railroads, he attacked the beef trust. He attacked the sugar trust. He attacked any monopoly that existed. And then let's use the other example from very early in his presidency, the anthracite coal strike. So at this time in 1902, 1903, coal is king. That is what powers houses, locomotives,

ships, the processes that make steel. The anthracite coal strike happens in Pennsylvania. Workers wanted higher wages, safer conditions, and a shorter workday. They had about a 10-hour workday, and they would work six days a week, sometimes even seven days or 10 to 14 days in a row.

The mine owning railroad was forced to come to the table at the I would say invitation, but really order of Theodore Roosevelt to meet with union leaders in the White House. Again, this is something that pretty routinely happens. It's now expected of the president of the United States, whether they're a Republican or a Democrat, if there's a major strike.

If they don't intervene, it's seen as their inaction. Theodore Roosevelt is the very first president to intervene in a labor strike and thereafter resets the relationship between a president, labor and corporations. In 1902, you have 1.4 million union members. By 1903, you have 700,000 more because suddenly the people see a president who recognizes their interests, not just those who control the economy.

I'm glad you brought the people up. Clearly, Teddy Roosevelt is using his executive power in expansive new ways. But one of his most famous slogans is that the presidency is a bully pulpit. This indicates that he's speaking to an audience, and I assume that audience is the American people. What is the bully pulpit and how did he use it?

Well, it's an invention of Theodore Roosevelt. It's basically the news cycle. I don't know that we can claim that the news cycle exists any longer with the explosion of the Internet. But Theodore Roosevelt in his time understood that if he, for instance,

He proclaimed something on a Sunday. It would dominate the papers on a Monday, and it would be the source of conversation all week long. He used his position and power as the president to understand how to communicate directly to the people.

Theodore Roosevelt understood the cadence and pace of news and newspapers, and he had a lot of help to his sister, Connie. She actually acted almost as his press secretary, a role that didn't exist at the time. But she knew that if the American people fell in love with the Roosevelt family, they

He would be far more successful in accomplishing his policies. So she would slip stories to the press of the antics going on at the White House. I mean, Theodore Roosevelt is an avatar of a new age. He's 42 years old, the youngest president in American history to this day. And he's got six kids.

three of whom are growing up in the White House, one of whom, Quentin, is a fairly young boy. They're bringing Algonquin the pony into the White House and letting him go up the elevator to the second floor. So the people are fascinated by this incredibly active, rambunctious, energetic figure.

family. And that's the bully pulpit. Theodore Roosevelt issued more executive orders in his presidency than every single president who preceded him combined. So he understood the power of an executive, the power of the bully pulpit, the power of going directly to the people, having them fall in love with you and your family as people and dominating the news cycle, not allowing anybody else to get a lion's share of the attention so he could drive his agenda forward.

It's easy to characterize Theodore Roosevelt as a hard-charging, rugged individualist who's able to accomplish enormous things all by the power of his own will. Your book, though, explores the influence of the women in his family and how he ran things by them and got their consult and confidence. Give us a sense of who influenced him during these years.

Well, The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt argues that the most masculine president in the American memory, Theodore Roosevelt, was actually the product of unsung and extraordinary women. Mitty, his mother, is an unsung influence in his life. She's actually the source of the books that he reads as a child, the McGuffey readers that contain phrases like the African proverb, speak softly and carry a big stick. That comes from the books his mother read to him as a child. His

First wife, Alice, we talked about her reform minded family, what they did to inform his progressive outlook. His second wife, Edith, who was his childhood sweetheart and later comes back after the death of Alice. She's basically his partner. She's a better judge of character. She sees things around the political corners that TR doesn't necessarily see. She's uniformly seen as a better compass by which to navigate politics.

by. But then you get to BAMI. TR's older sister was sort of like what Robert F. Kennedy was to John F. Kennedy. TR ran every major decision past BAMI. She advised him on matters of state. Her home at 1733 N Street, just around the corner from the White House, was known in the press as the Little White House. She was so influential that later Theodore Roosevelt's daughter, Alice, actually said that had BAMI

Bami been a man that she not Theodore Roosevelt would have been president of the United States and Eleanor Roosevelt has asked about this quote in the 1950s after she's been first lady and her husband FDR has died Eleanor Roosevelt agrees that had Bami been a man had she lived a hundred years later she not Theodore Roosevelt would have been president of the United States that gives you some sense of how these extraordinary women in TR's life propelled him forward towards success

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Finally, maybe this would lead rich and powerful people to acknowledge the barbaric nature of our healthcare system. Listen to Law & Crime's Luigi exclusively on Wondery+. You can join Wondery in the Wondery app, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. You know those creepy stories that give you goosebumps? The ones that make you really question what's real? Well, what if I told you that some of the strangest, darkest, and most mysterious stories are not found in haunted houses or abandoned forests, but instead...

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So if you crave totally true and thoroughly twisted horror stories and mysteries, Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries should be your new go-to weekly show. Listen to Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.

One of the things Theodore Roosevelt is perhaps best known for are his efforts in conservation. During his presidency, he protected over 200 million acres of public land. Where did this love of nature come from? From the badlands of North Dakota and his childhood.

when he was suffering from asthma and had to live a life of the mind in books and taxidermy. T.R. bought into cattle in North Dakota. He lived there as a rancher and a cowboy for the better part of two years after the death of his first wife, Alice, and his mother, Mitty,

on the same day in the same house. They died on February 14th, 1884, Valentine's Day. Theodore wrote an X in his diary, the light has gone out of my life. He didn't stand for reelection to the New York State Assembly. And here he goes to the nature of the Badlands. He was depressed. He was dejected. He didn't know what he was going to do next in his life. And he lived what he later called the strenuous life.

The Elkhorn Ranch, which is Theodore Roosevelt's private ranch, which today is a part of Theodore Roosevelt National Park, is known as the cradle of conservation because it is thought that it is here in the beauty of the Badlands. He discovered and deepened his conservation ethos.

He had seen the degradation of species as he traveled from east to west. He understood that the biodiversity of nature was being trampled by rampant commercialism. And he really thought that there was something that needed to be done if he ever had the power to do it. And once he did, boy, did he make a difference. I mean, 230 million acres of land conserved, 150 national forests, the creation of the U.S. Forest Service.

51 bird preserves, 18 national monuments, five national parks and four national game preserves. Mic drop. That is an environmental and conservation record that has never been equaled. He was the conservation president because he felt that he needed to look out 100 years into the future and protect the lands, the birds, the species for not just our children, but our children's children.

And it was not a popular view at the time. I mean, when he introduced his first notions of conservation, the Speaker of the House said there will not be one dime for scenery. I mean, there was no counter argument to conservation because as a concept, particularly in a political sense, there was no thought about it.

We did a seven-episode series, actually, on America's national parks a few years back. And in that series, one of my favorite stories was when naturalist John Muir invited Teddy Roosevelt to go camping in Yosemite National Park. Can you tell us about that trip?

Well, think about this, right? It's extraordinary. Theodore Roosevelt, the sitting president of the United States, takes a tour of the western states in 1903. He traveled by railroad, went through 25 states over nine weeks. He stopped at Yellowstone to hike and camp. He actually went skiing with John Burroughs, which is one of my favorite stories. John Burroughs was an American naturalist and an essayist who he called Um Nguyen.

John because of the kind of centeredness and stillness and amazing qualities that John Burroughs exuded. So he had this sense of humor to John and say we're out skiing and John Burroughs does a header and Teddy Roosevelt comes by sort of laughs at John Burroughs. And as he's laughing at him because he's done a header, then TR flips over and does a header in skiing and then John's laughing at him. So I just

I picture this incredible scene of the president of the United States taking the time to be out in nature, exploring with these naturalists. And then he continues on to California where he meets naturalist John Muir. And Muir introduces him to the beautiful Mariposa Grove and the sequoias and what he will later protect, the redwoods of California. He goes camping for three days here.

and sleeps beneath the stars and by campfire with John Muir. This is impossible to imagine in a modern context. I think it was President Obama who would reflect upon the freedom that TR had to take time away to think and be in nature and to look up at the stars and be influenced by these incredible thinkers of the time. It's really pretty extraordinary when you think about the progression of an ideal and the birth of conservationism, which also had its

connection to progressivism because, of course, this is for the people. This is the protection of the lands, the development of other lands, for the enjoyment of all the people. That is something Theodore Roosevelt understood that while Europe may have its grand cathedrals and its thousands of years of history, its kings and its queens, but

The cathedrals of the United States were in nature, and if we didn't protect them, they would be ruined forever, and they deserve and belong to all the people. I believe we have a quote from Teddy Roosevelt that would fit in well here, showing us how he thought about the value of public lands. Could you read it for us? Absolutely.

It is also vandalism, wantonly, to destroy or to permit the destruction of what is beautiful in nature, whether it be a cliff, a forest, or a species of mammal or bird.

Here in the United States, we turn our rivers and streams into sewers and dumping grounds. We pollute the air, we destroy forests, and exterminate fishes, birds, and mammals. Not to speak of vulgarizing charming landscapes with hideous advertisements. But at last, it looks as if our people are awakening.

So Roosevelt was not just a proponent of conservation. He was also an avid hunter and collector of specimens. These seem at first to be irreconcilable. How should we think about these things? Well, certainly I think it's true to this day that some of the greatest conservationists are hunters. And Theodore Roosevelt, remember, began his life as a child who was so sick with asthma he couldn't go out and explore the great outdoors. He lived his life

in the mind through books and through taxidermy. And his greatest aspiration at that point was to become a natural scientist. When he went to Harvard, he's not the Theodore Roosevelt that you know from Mount Rushmore. He was a geeky naturalist in whose wake formaldehyde lingered. What he wanted to do was to live a life in nature and science. And because of meeting Alice and that progressive

Lee Saltenstall and Cabot Lee family, it changed the direction of his professional ambition. Alice was in first class and they were not issuing any first class tickets in natural science. And, you know, some of the biggest misunderstanding of TR comes around hunting.

He hunted for the purposes of scientific exploration. The African expedition, for instance, to East Africa, the specimens and series that were collected at the time are still used to this day.

day to inform the biodiversity of parts of East Africa. And the reason he would often hunt so much is that in order to understand a species, you would have to have a collection in order to take it back and examine it. Now, obviously, that has changed. But in TR's time, what he was doing was living out his dream as a naturalist and a scientist.

It's easy to understand, I think, why Theodore Roosevelt is such a compelling figure. His charm, his wit, his progressive politics. He's a force of nature.

But what is it about this man and his legacy that captivates you so much so that you are now the CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library Foundation? What does he mean today? So Theodore Roosevelt has given up power voluntarily. He's gone and self-exiled to Africa on an expedition for nearly a year. And now he's making his way back.

Back from Africa to the United States, he travels through Europe. And on April 23rd, 1910, he's invited to speak at the Sorbonne in Paris. And he delivers Citizenship in a Republic, which is more famously known today as the In the Arena speech. He says...

It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs,

who comes up short again and again because there is no effort without error and shortcoming. Theodore Roosevelt is remarkably culturally relevant for someone who died in 1919. I mean, LeBron James puts in the arena on his shoes before every game. Miley Cyrus has the in the arena speech tattooed on her forearm. I mean, Brene Brown's entire philosophy of vulnerability is based on the resilience of hearing that famous in the arena speech. You know, it's not the critic that counts, but

the man and today the woman who is in the arena making a difference. I mean, I think that the lesson of TR's life is that you are not always going to succeed. You are not always going to fail. But if you're not in the fight, you can't make a difference. And whatever change you believe you can make in the world, you need to be in the arena. That is why we're building the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in Medora, North Dakota, in the

We're opening July 4th, 2026, the 250th anniversary of America, because we want to invite people to come to hike, to bike, to go on horseback, to be out in nature where TR recovered and to get in the arena of the cause they most believe in. In TR's time, it was some of the basic protections that we all continue to enjoy today. But today you need to look ahead a hundred years into the future like TR did and see what tomorrow needs to be.

today by your leadership, your involvement, getting in the arena. Well, Ed O'Keefe, congratulations and good luck on the opening of the library. And thank you so much for joining me on American History Tellers. It was my pleasure, Lindsay. Good to be with you.

That was my conversation with Ed O'Keefe. His book, The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt, The Women Who Created a President, is available now from Simon & Schuster. The Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library is scheduled to open in Medora, North Dakota on July 4th, 2026.

From Wondery, this is the sixth and final episode of our series on the Progressive Era for American History Tellers. In our next season, in the fall of 1906, a mysterious outbreak of typhoid fever strikes a wealthy New York family vacationing in Oyster Bay, Long Island. Suspicion quickly falls on the family's Irish cook, who had vanished after the first cases emerged. The ensuing hunt leads city officials on a frustrating, winding path through New York in their effort to find Typhoid Mary.

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American History Tellers is hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham for Airship. Sound design by Molly Bach. Supervising sound designer, Matthew Filler. Music by Throm. Additional writing by Ellie Stanton. This episode was produced by Polly Stryker and Alita Rozanski. Our senior interview producer is Peter Arcuni. Managing producer, Desi Blaylock. Senior managing producer is Callum Clues. Senior producer, Andy Herman. Executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marshall Louis, and

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