Search
Search Results
- Description:
- John A. Sleicher will take lunch with President Roosevelt at Oyster Bay, New York any day this week.
- Date:
- 1902-08-11
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Sleicher, John A. (John Albert), 1848-1921
- Description:
- Prince Ching will be arriving in the United States and Secretary of State Hay suggests that President Roosevelt invite him to a luncheon at Oyster Bay, New York.
- Date:
- 1902-07-17
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Hay, John, 1838-1905
- Description:
- Editor of Leslie's Weekly John A. Sleicher discusses a political cartoon drawn by Victor Gillam and accepts a lunch invitation. Sleicher references a previous conversation with President Roosevelt in Oyster Bay, New York, and conveys worries about the National Deficit's affect on the suc...
- Date:
- 1903-11-03
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Sleicher, John A. (John Albert), 1848-1921
- Description:
- Nicholas Murray Butler discusses the recent mayoral election in New York. Butler conveys the public's positive reaction to President Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln, and George Washington and the public's negative reaction to George B. McClellan, Mr. Murphy, and Seth Low. In regard to his rece...
- Date:
- 1903-11-09
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Butler, Nicholas Murray, 1862-1947
- Description:
- Endicott Peabody accepts an invitation from President Roosevelt to lunch at Oyster Bay. Peabody suggests Henry Fairfield Osborn might be the right Princeton man for the job of negotiating football rules. He also discusses Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt's upcoming visit to Groton School to visit...
- Date:
- 1905-09-21
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Peabody, Endicott, 1857-1944
- Description:
- Herbert H. D. Peirce writes to William Loeb to discuss the confusion with the telegrams sent to the plenipotentiaries. He hopes Loeb will share his explanation with President Roosevelt.
- Date:
- 1905-09-08
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Peirce, Herbert H. D. (Herbert Henry Davis), 1849-1916
- Description:
- Baron Takahira writes to Benjamin F. Barnes, explaining that he and Baron Komura received two different invitations to dine with President Roosevelt--one for luncheon and one for dinner. Takahira asks for clarification, stating that either arrangement is agreeable.
- Date:
- 1905-09-07
- Partner:
- Theodore Roosevelt Center
- Author:
- Takahira, Kogoro, Baron, 1854-1926