Theodore Roosevelt †

Steckbrief von Theodore Roosevelt

Name:Theodore Roosevelt
Beruf:US-amerikanischer Politiker und 26. Präsident der USA
Alter:60 Jahre
Geburtsdatum:27. Oktober 1858
Geburtsort:New York City, USA
Todesdatum:6. Januar 1919
Sterbeort:Oyster Bay, New York, USA
Sternzeichen:Skorpion
Größe:1,78 m

Theodore „Teddy“ Roosevelt, Jr. , geboren am 27. Oktober 1858 in New York City, USA, und verstorben am 6. Januar 1919 in Oyster Bay, New York, USA war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker, der von 1901 bis 1909 als 26. Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten amtierte.

Nach der Teilnahme am Spanisch-Amerikanischen Krieg, in dem er die Rough Riders befehligte, wurde er Ende 1898 zum Gouverneur von New York gewählt. Unter William McKinley war er ab dem 4. März 1901 für etwa sechs Monate Vizepräsident, bis er nach dem tödlichen Attentat auf McKinley am 14. September 1901 im Alter von 42 Jahren zum Präsidenten vereidigt wurde. Damit ist Roosevelt – bezogen auf sein Lebensalter bei der Amtseinführung – der bislang jüngste Staatspräsident in der Geschichte der USA.

Als Kandidat der Republikanischen Partei wurde er 1904 wiedergewählt, bevor er 1908 vorerst auf die Kandidatur für eine weitere Amtszeit verzichtete. Sein Nachfolger wurde William Howard Taft, der ebenfalls der Republikanischen Partei angehörte. Weil er mit dessen Politik unzufrieden war und die Republikaner 1912 nicht ihn, sondern erneut den Amtsinhaber nominiert hatten, kandidierte Roosevelt für die auf seine Initiative neu gegründete Progressive Partei neben Taft für das US-Präsidentenamt. Er wie auch Taft unterlagen jedoch bei der Wahl im November 1912 Woodrow Wilson, dem Kandidaten der Demokratischen Partei.

Auf internationaler Ebene war Roosevelt im Jahr 1906 als erstem Amerikaner der Friedensnobelpreis zuerkannt worden, nachdem er im Vorjahr mit seiner diplomatischen Initiative maßgeblich zum Ende des Russisch-Japanischen Krieges beigetragen hatte.

Mehr über Theodore Roosevelt auf Wikipedia

Zitate von Theodore Roosevelt

Hinter dem, was wir für die Regierung halten, thront im Verborgenen eine Regierung ohne jede Bindung an und ohne jede Verantwortung für das Volk. Die Vernichtung dieser unsichtbaren Regierung und Zerschlagung der unheiligen Allianz von korrupter Wirtschaft und korrupter Politik ist die entscheidende politische Herausforderung dieser Zeit.

Quelle

Zitiert in Al Gore:ʼʼ Angriff auf die Vernunftʼʼ (The Assault on Reason). Aus dem Englischen von Enrico Heinemann und Friedrich Pflüger. Goldmann, München 2007, S. 120, ISBN: 978-3-442-15543-9
Theodore Roosevelt wurde in New York City, USA, geboren.

Bilder zum Thema Theodore Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt Bild 1
The Italianate rowhouse located at 736 Jackson Place on Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., was built in 1870 for Cornelia Knower Marcy, the widow of politician William L. Marcy. A renovation and expansion completed in 1895 was designed by Carrère and Hastings. The building is often called the Marcy-Townsend House and is a contributing property to the Lafayette Square Historic District. Previous occupants include Representative John Stoughton Newberry, Secretary James G. Blaine, Representative William Lawrence Scott, businessman Richard H. Townsend (see Townsend House), its most notable occupant, President Theodore Roosevelt, who briefly lived there in 1902 when the White House was under renovation, Dutch Ambassador Willem Louis Frederik Christiaan van Rappard, the Womens City Club of Washington, and the National Lutheran Council of the United Lutheran Church of America. The building houses offices of the United States Digital Service.
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Title: An outdoor speech Abstract/medium: 1 photomechanical print.
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keine Bildbeschreibung
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One of the many Apple Think Different posters
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Title: Cuninghame looking for the bullet in the skull of a hippo shot by Roosevelt Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
Theodore Roosevelt Bild 6
Title: Dining room in home of Pres. Theodore Roosevelt, Washington, D.C. with moose head and rams head on walls Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.

Alle 46 Bilder anzeigen

Theodore Roosevelt Bild 7
Sister Regina Purtell (1866-1950) was a Roman Catholic nun and nurse. During the Spanish-American War she served as a U. S. Army nurse, caring for Theodore Roosevelts Rough Riders at the Camp Wikoff Army Hospital, Montauk Point, Long Island. She was also President Roosevelts personal nurse, at his request, when he met her again at St. Vincents Hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana. She was known as The Florence Nightingale of the Spanish-American War.
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Title: For President Teddy the rough rider, his policy equal rights for all Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: Going to see the President at Divide Creek School House Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print on card mount.
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Hunting Big Game in Africa (aka Roosevelt in Africa), movie poster
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The photo represents John Merritt Sammis in a newspaper article from The Brooklyn Times (1901)
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Roosevelt City
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I regard the building of The American University as the most important educational enterprise the Methodist Church has ever undertaken. I am proud of it. (McKinley, from a meeting of The American University Board of Trustees and university founder Bishop Hurst at the White House.) U.S. President William McKinley (1843-1901), a close friend of Bishop Hurst, was a member of the Board of Trustees and one of the earliest supporters of the plan to develop The American University. Hurst had intended to name each building for a state, and this building was to have been called the Ohio College of Government. When President Theodore Roosevelt laid the cornerstone for the building on May 14, 1902, it was instead named in memory of William McKinley who had been assassinated before the buildings completion.
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The house at the trailhead of Mt. Marcy, where en:Theodore Roosevelt was staying when he received word that en:William McKinley had been shot. Today the house is disused and in a state of serious disrepair.
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Title: On the ranche Abstract/medium: 1 photomechanical print.
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Title: On the safari at Botha Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Diagram of U.S. Military Presidents with highest obtained rank, starting from the first to most recent president to have served. (Presidential images courtesy of educational, governmental and historical public sources. U.S. Air Force graphic/Senior Airman Luis Loza Gutierrez) GRAND FORKS AIR FORCE BASE, N.D -- The majority of our nations presidents hold the distinction of once being referred to as brothers-in-arms before they ever held the title of Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Armed Forces. In observance of Presidents Day, we present the following facts: Thirty-one of our 44 American presidents have served in the military, and 12 of them have been general officers (O-7 to O-11 with one, at least in theory, O-12). The three presidents to hold the highest military ranks were: George Washington, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Ulysses S. Grant, respectively. Washington held the rank of lieutenant general (O-9) when he died, but in 1976, then-president Gerald R. Ford posthumously appointed him to General of the Armies of the United States. The only other person to hold the same title was Gen. John J. Pershing, who retired on Sept. 13, 1924. Although both Washington and Pershing received the same appointment, Washington is considered the higher-ranking officer as President Ford specified he would rank higher than all officers past, present and future. This special appointment would theoretically make Washington a six-star general - or O-12. President Eisenhower reached the status of a five-star general while serving as Supreme Allied Commander in Europe during World War II (1942-1945). He is one of only nine U.S. officers to have worn the five-star insignia. In all, four Army generals, four Navy admirals, and one Air Force general have officially worn the five-star insignia. President Grant served as lieutenant general until Congress enacted legislation authorizing the grade of General of the Army on July 25, 1866. Although that title is associated with the five-star insignia, Grant held the position as a four-star general. He saw combat in both the Mexican-American War and the Civil War. In addition to those who went on to achieve general officer ranks, ten of the presidents obtained the rank of colonel (O-6). Two of those colonels were also two of our nations Founding Fathers: Thomas Jefferson (third president) and James Madison (fourth president). Both were militia men. Another president who served as an Army colonel was Theodore Roosevelt (26th president). During the Spanish-American War, Roosevelt helped organized and command the 1st U.S. Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, better known as the Rough Riders. As a former president, Roosevelt volunteered for service in World War I, however, then-president Woodrow Wilson, declined Roosevelts offer. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor in 2001. Two of the presidents reached the pay grade of O-5. One of those O-5s was our 36th president and former Navy commander, Lyndon B. Johnson. LBJ served during World War II and was presented a Silver Star medal by Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur for his role on a B-26 bomber mission. The other was President James Monroe (fifth president). Two other presidents who had notable military service in the Navy were John F. Kennedy and George H. W. Bush, our 35th and 41st presidents respectively. Both men achieved the rank of lieutenant (O-3) and both served during World War II. JFK earned a Purple Heart and a Navy and Marine Corps Medal for heroism. Our 41st president, President George H. W. Bush, remains the youngest person to ever become an aviator in the U.S. Navy. The former Sailor also earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for his actions during a mission. He completed his attack on Japanese military forces despite his aircraft catching fire and ultimately crashing. President Bushs son, George W. Bush became our nations 43rd president, but not before serving as a pilot in the Texas and Alabama Air National Guard. He is currently the only president to have served in the modern-day U.S. Air Force. However, Ronald Reagan, our 40th president, was part of the Air Forces early history. Reagan served as a captain in the U.S. Army Air Force (also known as Army Air Corps). He helped make more than 400 training films when he was assigned to the 1st Motion Picture Unit in Culver City, Calif. He was discharged from active duty in 1945, prior to the Air Force becoming its own separate military service in 1947. James Buchanan, our 15th president, held the lowest rank among our military presidents. He was a private (E-1) in the Army, and the only president who enlisted without becoming an officer. He saw combat during the War of 1812. Buchanans successor, President Abraham Lincoln, was a private in the Illinois State Militia. He fought in the Black Hawk War, and although his military service was only three months, he was elected to the rank of captain by his militia company. According to Renee Hylton, a historian for the National Guard Bureau, election of officers within militia units was a common practice at the times.
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Title: Parlor in home of Theodore Roosevelt, Washington, D.C. Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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A fenceline on Coles Rolling Road southeast of Keene in Albemarle County, Virginia, United States. The fence marks the boundaries of Pine Knot, a largely wooded property that was once the country residence of Theodore Roosevelt; it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Title: Roosevelt an Dr. Gladden at Columbus Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt at St. Louis Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt at St. Louis Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt at the American Interdenominational Mission Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: Roosevelt at the Invalides accompanied by Gen. Dalstein in France Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt at Union Station Abstract/medium: National Photo Company Collection (Library of Congress) Physical description: 1 negative :
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Title: Roosevelt at Union Station, [Washington, D.C.], May 1914 Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 8 x 10 in. or smaller
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Title: Roosevelt Camp Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: Roosevelt congratulated by Supreme Court Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: Roosevelt crowd, Yonkers, N.Y. Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt Dam, Ariz. Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: Roosevelt Dam, Ariz. Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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Title: ROOSEVELT DAM, ARIZONA. SALT RIVER PROJECT OF BUREAU OF RECLAMATION. DEDICATION SCENE Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller
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Title: Roosevelt Exhibit, Museum Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 8 x 6 in.
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Title: Roosevelt Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
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Title: Roosevelt speaking Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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As a picture, Roosevelt is including Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and others, except for indecent indecent religion. Can definitely change to a new religion
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Sewall House is a national historic registry home where Theodore Roosevelt learned the healing attributes of nature with his nature guide, William Sewall.
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This is a photo of Sister Regina Purtells family. Regina Purtell (1866-1950) was a Roman Catholic nun, and for one year a nurse for the US Army who took care of Theodore Roosevelts Rough Riders during the Spanish-American War. She became known as The Florence Nightingale of the Spanish-American War. At President Roosevelts personal request, she was also his nurse when he had surgery, and the family says that she also cared for his children later. Her mother Catherine and father John are seated at center left and center right in the front row. Here is the whole lineup: Rear Row: Mary (Burg), John Jr., Margaret (Ennis), Ellen (Sr. Regina), Joseph, Catherine (Beston) Front Row: Edward (EJ), Francis, Catherine (Sullivan), John, Thomas, Julia (Donnelley). Photo provided July 4, 2023, by Colin Purtell.
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Teddy Roosevelt but its Grand Dad
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Photograph of Theodore Roosevelt showing head and shoulders, facing slightly left. No information on size of the photo given. Restoration notes: Lots of scratches, which I carefully removed. Mainly just a dust and scratch removal, but I did apply a very slight sharpening to the right half of his moustache.
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The 4th Infantry Division color guard stands in formation with European partners from Germany and France at a ceremony that commemorates Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the deputy commanding general for the division during Operation Overlord at Sainte-Mere-Eglise, France, June 4, 2024. The Ivy Division stands shoulder to shoulder with our French allies, just as they did 80 years ago during the Axis occupation. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Isaiah Mount.)
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Retired Gen. Mark Milley speaks at a ceremony that commemorates Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the deputy commanding general for the division during Operation Overlord, at Sainte-Mere-Eglise, France, June 4, 2024. Milley talked about the incredible leadership and dedication that Roosevelt Jr. demonstrated until his death while fighting in WWII July 12, 1944. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Isaiah Mount.)
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C-130 cargo aircraft fly over a monument dedicated to Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the deputy commanding general for the 4th infantry division during Operation Overlord during a ceremony at Sainte-Mere-Eglise, France, June 4, 2024. Roosevelt Jr. led the first wave of troops at Utah Beach where he directed the assault and would later receive the Medal of Honor. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Isaiah Mount.)
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Soldiers from the 4th Infantry Division salute during the National Anthem at a ceremony commemorating Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the deputy commanding general for the division during Operation Overlord at Sainte-Mere-Eglise, France, June 4, 2024. As the deputy division commander of the Ivy Division, Roosevelt Jr. led the assault on Utah Beach during the D-Day landings.
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Title: Theodore Roosevelt walking in a homecoming parade with New York City Mayor William Gaynor and Cornelius Vanderbilt, New York City Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.
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outside Theodore Roosevelt House, Sagamore Hill, Long Island, museum and former home of Theodore Roosevelts son.

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Fakten über Theodore Roosevelt

  • Wodurch ist Theodore Roosevelt bekannt?

    Theodore Roosevelt war ein 🙋‍♂️ US-amerikanischer Politiker und 26. Präsident der USA

  • Wie alt wurde Theodore Roosevelt?

    Theodore Roosevelt erreichte ein Alter von ⌛ 60 Jahren.

  • Wann hat Theodore Roosevelt Geburtstag?

    Theodore Roosevelt wurde an einem Mittwoch am ⭐ 27. Oktober 1858 geboren.

  • Wo wurde Theodore Roosevelt geboren?

    Theodore Roosevelt wurde in 🚩 New York City, USA, geboren.

  • Wann starb Theodore Roosevelt?

    Theodore Roosevelt ist am ✟ 6. Januar 1919 in Oyster Bay, New York, USA, gestorben.

  • In welchem Sternzeichen wurde Theodore Roosevelt geboren?

    Theodore Roosevelt wurde im westlichen Sternzeichen ♏ Skorpion geboren.

  • Wie groß war Theodore Roosevelt?

    Theodore Roosevelt hatte eine Größe von ca. 📏 1,78 m. Damit ist er kleiner als die meisten deutschen Männer. Laut Statistik von 2021 beträgt die durchschnittliche Körpergröße eines Mannes in Deutschland 1,79 m.

Mehr Geburtstage am 27. Oktober

Mehr 60jährige Prominente

Mehr Politiker

Auch im Jahr 1919 verstorben

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