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Theodore Roosevelt Film Library
Volume 2 (Containing 23 films)
Theodore Roosevelt was the first U.S. president
to have his career and life chronicled on a large scale by motion
picture companies (even though his predecessors, Grover Cleveland
and William McKinley, were the first to be filmed). This presentation
features films which record events in Roosevelt's life from
the Spanish-American War in 1898 to his death in 1919. Besides
containing scenes of Roosevelt, these films include views of
world figures, politicians, monarchs, and friends and family
members of Roosevelt who influenced his life and the era in
which he lived. Commemorative events up to 1921 are also included.
Here are some sample clips from four of
the movies on this CD
Here is a description of each film on this
CD
President McKinley inauguration, 1901
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n.], 1901.
SUMMARY The first ca. 49 ft., views of President
William McKinley speaking, may be unrelated footage.
Views of crowds on Pennsylvania Ave., NW, in front
of the old Willard Hotel during the March 4, l90l
inaugural festivities. A mounted military unit rides
through what is probably the court of honor, the area
on Pennsylvania Ave., NW, from Fifteenth to Seventeenth
Sts.; the President and his party reviewed the inaugural
parade from a stand in this area. McKinley doffs his
hat to the crowd as his carriage passes the Willard
Hotel. Sen. Marcus A. Hanna of Ohio (1897-1904) sits
beside McKinley in the carriage. Several members of
the President's special escort, Troop A of the Ohio
National Guard, are visible along with aides and guards.
The man riding alone in the second carriage may be
TR. The last sequence, of McKinley in a carriage in
the court of honor, is repeated.
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President McKinley's funeral, 1901 [1] (in 3 parts)
CREATED/PUBLISHED [United States : s.n.], 1901.
SUMMARY Three sequences of the funeral ceremonies held
for President William McKinley:
1) McKinley's body lay in state in the Rotunda of the
Capitol, Washington, D.C. on Sept. 17, 1901; views of
officers on horseback, the Artillery Band (wearing dark
headdresses), a squadron of cavalry, a battalion of
artillery and coast artillery, Marine Band (wearing
white helmets), battalion of Marines, civilians carrying
umbrellas (may be the diplomatic corps), other civilians,
guard of honor, pallbearers, and the horsedrawn hearse
all turning the corner off what may be Pennsylvania
Avenue on their way to the Capitol; camera pans the
hearse, as a procession of carriages turns the corner.
2) McKinley's body first lay in state for public viewing
in Buffalo, N.Y. on Sept. 15-16; views of carriages,
the horsedrawn hearse, and marchers stopping in front
of the Buffalo City Hall; medium close shots of the
casket being unloaded from hearse and carried up stairs
of City Hall; crowds of mourners lining up to view the
body as group of soldiers enters City Hall; camera pans
crowd gathered outside as mourners enter and leave City
Hall. Unrelated sequence of Washington ceremonies follows;
camera pans from different angles of crowds gathered
at the east front of the Capitol.
3) McKinley's body was conveyed to its final resting
place at Canton, Ohio on Sept. 18-19; views of mounted
military units, marching civilians, carriages, and the
horsedrawn hearse turning and entering what is probably
Westlawn Cemetery where McKinley is buried; military
units marching down a street as gathered crowds watch;
final pans of mourners, crowds, and soldiers outside
the McKinley home in Canton.
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President reviewing school children
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company; 1903.
SUMMARY From the side of a broad avenue, a crowd of
people await the arrival of President Theodore Roosevelt.
The marching military that precedes his carriage can
be seen at a distance of a quarter of a mile away. Four
other camera positions along the march include the escort,
the dignitaries, and at the conclusion, Roosevelt in
his carriage.
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President Roosevelt and the Rough Riders
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company, [1898]
SUMMARY From the Biograph picture catalogue: 29 feet.
This picture shows Col. Roosevelt, accompanied by Lieut.
Greenway and other prominent officers of the Rough Riders,
galloping up to his headquarters, where he dismounts
and walks into his tent. This view was taken in the
camp with the Rough Riders, and is an excellent picture
of Col. Roosevelt in the environment he loves so well.
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President Roosevelt at the Canton station
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : Thomas A. Edison,
Inc., 1901.
SUMMARY The film begins by showing Theodore Roosevelt
arriving with other mourners at Canton, Ohio. Mr. Roosevelt
is shown leaving the station and getting into his carriage.
The remainder of the film was photographed by panning
the camera over the large crowd gathered in the area
to watch the arrival of celebrities attending the funeral
of President McKinley.
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Pres. Roosevelt at the dedication ceremonies, St.
Louis Exposition
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : Selig Polyscope Co.,
1903.
SUMMARY At the speaker's platform, President Theodore
Roosevelt prepares to enter a carriage.
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President Roosevelt at the Army-Navy game
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company; 1902.
SUMMARY President Roosevelt, accompanied by Secretary
of War Root, Secretary of the Navy Long, and a number
of others, crosses the football field during the half-time
of the game.
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President Roosevelt reviewing the troops at Charleston
Exposition
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : Edison Mfg. Co.,
1902.
SUMMARY President Roosevelt is standing on a platform
in front of an Auditorium, photographed from across
the street. At his left is Mrs. Roosevelt, holding carnations.
They review the army, navy, and marine corps foot soldiers
at the opening of the Charleston Exposition. Other prominent
individiuals shown are Captain F.W. Wagener, Mayor Smyth
of Charleston, Governor McSweeney of South Carolina,
and Governor Avcock.
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Pres. Roosevelt's Fourth of July oration
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company : Kleine Optical Co., 1903.
SUMMARY President Theodore Roosevelt eats and then
speaks to a crowd who have gathered to hear him. From
another camera position, the crowd bids him farewell
as Roosevelt and his party enter a horse-drawn carriage
and leave the vicinity.
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President Wilson arrives in New York to lead fourth
Liberty Loan parade [1918]
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n., 1918].
SUMMARY Views of fourth Liberty Loan ceremonies in
New York City and Washington, Sept. 1918. Inaugurating
a national drive for the sale of liberty bonds, President
Wilson, his wife Edith, and mother-in-law, Mrs. W. H.
Bolling, arrive in New York on Sept. 27, 1918. At Pennsylvania
Railroad Station they are greeted by crowds and joined
by the President's two daughters, Margaret Wilson and
Eleanor McAdoo, as they enter a touring car en route
to the Waldorf-Astoria. Views of flag-lined Fifth Avenue
on the following day, with flags of the twenty-two Allied
nations and banners supporting liberty bonds filling
the Avenue. Emile Cartier, Belgian Minister to the United
States, speaks at the dedication of the Altar of Liberty,
an open-air structure in Madison Square designed by
Thomas Hastings in support of the Liberty Loan effort;
marching soldiers and band. On the south portico of
the U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, D.C., Geraldine
Farrar, member of the Metropolitan opera company, ceremonially
sells bond to Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs
McAdoo as Leo S. Rowe, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury,
watches.
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The president's carriage
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company, 1903.
SUMMARY This film shows President Roosevelt in San
Francisco, passing in the arrival parade on Market Street
on Tuesday, May 12, 1903. The camera view is from the
north side of Market Street, just east of Grant Avenue.
After leaving the Southern Pacific train station at
Third and Townsend streets, the parade proceeded up
Third Street and wound through downtown San Francisco
before continuing up Market Street to a ceremony at
the Native Sons Hall on Mason Street. The film was taken
a few minutes after 3:00pm, when the extensive military
portion of the parade had already passed. Some of the
store signs seen in the film along the south side of
Market Street include Townsend's California Glace Fruits,
Swan the Painter, Charles Lyons (merchant tailor), Morley
Billiards, and Spreckles Market.
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The Prince of Wales visits TR's grave
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n.], 1919.
SUMMARY In the summer of 1919, Edward, the Prince of
Wales, later King Edward VIII, embarked on a tour of
the Dominions. After touring Canada for several months,
the Prince decided to spend several days in the United
States. His visit was the first visit of a Prince of
Wales to the United States since that of his grandfather,
Edward VII, fifty years earlier. On his last day in
New York, Nov. 21, 1919, the Prince made a semiprivate
journey to Oyster Bay. Film shows the Prince placing
a laurel wreath on TR's grave in Youngs Memorial Cemetery;
the Prince, Theodore Roosevelt Jr., wearing a mourning
band, a man who is probably Joseph M. Nye, Chief of
Special Agents, Dept. of State, and a group of men return
down the path from the gravesite. Behind the Prince,
the man wearing dark glasses is probably Viscount Grey,
British Ambassador to the United States. A man wearing
an ascot and walking in the rear of the group may be
Rodman Wanamaker, Chairman of the Mayor's Committee
on Reception to Distinguished Guests. The Prince tips
his hat to people gathered alongside the path.
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Clemenceau and Foch, 1917-1919
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n., 1918?]
SUMMARY Film appears to have been photographed in France
during WWI. Medium close shot of Quentin Roosevelt with
a small building in background; brief shot of French
and American officers, including Lieutenant Edward V.
Rickenbacker at immediate right, talking; view of a
troop train moving through a European town as people
line the tracks waving to soldiers. Final sequence is
medium close panning shots, from left to right, of:
John J. Pershing, commander in chief of American forces;
André Tardieu, French diplomat; Premier Georges Clemenceau
of France; Marshal Ferdinand Foch, commander in chief
of French forces; an unidentified French officer; General
Maxime Weygand, staff officer to Foch; and Major General
James W. McAndrews, general chief of staff of American
forces, posing as they leave a building.
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RMA flag service on the steps of New York Public
Library, 1919
CREATED/PUBLISHED [Kinogram Pub. Corp.] 1919
SUMMARY On October 27, 1919 the Roosevelt memorial
flag, which has been carried across New York State in
TR's honor, is brought to rest at his grave in Youngs
Memorial Cemetery, Oyster Bay, N.Y. Views of Samuel
Abbott, originator of the memorial flag idea, placing
the flag on TR's grave. Sequence of two young girls
and a boy placing flower bouquet and flag through fence
surrounding TR's grave, event may not be part of flag
ceremonies. Final scenes of flag ceremony sponsored
by Roosevelt Memorial Association on the steps of New
York Public Library, Oct. 25; long shots of notables
standing on platform, possible identifications from
right to left are: Henry Cabot Lodge, honorary vice-president
of RMA; the man next to Lodge is probably Henry J. Allen,
Governor of Kansas; William Boyce Thompson, president
of RMA, is holding the flag with the help of a man who
appears to be Henry D. Lindsley, chairman of the event;
William Loeb Jr., vice-president of RMA, is visible
in back of Thompson; next to Loeb is probably William
Gibbs McAdoo; and the man to the far left with hands
to his side may be Elihu Root, an RMA trustee. Sequence
of Boy Scouts and members of the Naval Reserve hoisting
flag up flagpole as an unidentified man leads the crowd
in singing.
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Roosevelt scenes [1917-1918]
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n., 1917?]
SUMMARY Views of TR at various public functions in
support of the war effort: 1) TR stands with Brigadier
General Michael J. Lenihan, fellow-officer in the Spanish-American
War, and speaks to camera during an informal visit to
Camp Mills, near Garden City, N.Y., on Sept. 2, 1917;
2) on the lawn of Sagamore Hill on Aug. 22, 1917, TR
and members of the Belgian mission pose for camera;
identified in group are Capt. Thomas C. Cook, American
Army officer; Hector Carlier, a secretary of the mission;
Major Leon Osterrieth, Belgian Army officer; George
T. Wilson and Frederic Coudert, prominent New Yorkers;
Baron Ludovic Moncheur, former Ambassador to the United
States and head of the mission; General Mathieu Leclercq,
Commander of the Belgian Cavalry; Jean D. Mertens, a
secretary of the mission; T. P. O'Connor, Irish political
leader and writer; and Count Louis d'Ursel, Belgian
Army officer and diplomat; 3) at Forest Hills, N.Y.,
on July 4, 1917, TR reviews and marches with the Forest
Hills Rifle Club; 4) on Sept. 28, 1917, TR speaks at
a large pro-war parade in St. Paul, Minn., with Minnesota
Governor Joseph A. A. Burnquist (1915-1921) standing
behind him on platform; 5) supporting the Liberty Loan
effort in Billings, Mont., TR parades through downtown
Billings street, preceded by cowboys on horseback; 6)
at Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill., TR and Thomas H. Barry,
Commander of the camp, address troops on Sept. 26, 1917;
7) TR speaks to crowds at the launching of the U.S.S.
Newburgh in Newburgh, N.Y., Sept. 2, 1918; 8) from the
porch at Sagamore TR addresses volunteer workers for
the third Liberty Loan on April 2, 1918; 9) TR is in
Springfield, Ill. on Aug. 26, 1918 to endorse a rapid
ending of the war; 10) final sequence may be of TR arriving
at the Naval Service Club in Boston on May 2, 1918,
in an open car with man who is probably president of
the club, F. Nathaniel Perkins
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Roosevelt's Rough Riders
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company, [1898]
SUMMARY From the Biograph picture catalogue: 27 feet.
A charge full of cowboy enthusiasm by Troop "I," the
famous regiment, at Tampa, before its departure for
the front.
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Sarah Bernhardt addresses crowd in Prospect Park,
Brooklyn, 1917
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n.], 1917.
SUMMARY On July 4, 1917, French actress Sarah Bernhardt
speaks in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, N.Y., on behalf of
French-American cooperation in the war effort. Addressing
more than 50,000 people gathered around a decorated
music platform, Mme. Bernhardt stands and speaks from
an open touring car parked in front of the platform.
Medium close shot of Mme. Bernhardt speaking and gesturing,
with man who may be her personal physician, Dr. Felix
Marot, and woman who is probably her secretary and translator,
Miss Elizabeth Ormsby, seated in car.
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Scenes and incidents, Russo-Japanese peace conference,
Portsmouth, N.H. (in 4 parts)
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : Edison Mfg. Co.,
1905.
SUMMARY Scenes from the 1905 peace conference between
the Russian and Japanese Governments, mediated by the
U.S. Government at the invitation of President Theodore
Roosevelt. Scenes of the dignitaries and celebrities
who are part of the conference include travel between
Oyster Bay and New York and Portsmouth. The Japanese,
then the Russian, delegations, including envoys Count
Vitte, Baron Rosen, and Marquis Jutaro Komura depart,
from the foot of 23rd Street, at the East River, the
wharf of the New York Yacht Club for Oyster Bay, Long
Island on August 5. The Japanese delegation boards two
U.S. Navy launches. The Russian delegation is greeted
by third assistant secretary of state Herbert H.D. Pierce.
The last two men walking down the ramp are Witte (the
tallest) and Rosen, and other members of the Russian
delegation board another launch. The launches are taken
to ships and then to Oyster Bay to confer with President
Theodore Roosevelt.
On August 9, first the Russian and then the Japanese
delegations are received by Rear Admiral William W.
Mead, commanding officer of the Portsmouth Navy Yard,
and staff at the Portsmouth Navy Yard. Baron Kogoro
Takahira is the Japanese Ambasador to the United States.
On August 8, a street procession follows the arrival
of the envoys Portsmouth. The parade includes the New
Hampshire National Guard, with the Russians in the first
carriage, and the Japanese in the second. The officials
arrive at Rockingham County Court House in Portsmouth.
Members of the delegations depart from the Hotel Wentworth
in Newcastle, N.H. by automobile for the first conference
in the negotiations, with the Japanese in the first
car, and the Russians in the second.
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Scenes of Roosevelt Dam
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n., 1911?]
SUMMARY Panoramic views of the Roosevelt Dam on the
Salt River in Arizona: shots include rocky hill above
dam, water rushing through portions of dam, and a car
being driven on road across dam. Since a flag waves
from back of car, film may have been shot at dedication
ceremonies, March 18, 1911 at which TR delivered the
principal address. The Roosevelt dam, a major irrigation
project in the Salt River Valley near Phoenix, is largely
a result of TR's land reclamation efforts when he was
President.
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Scenes of the British royal family
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n.], 1918.
SUMMARY Queen Mary, King George in the uniform of an
Admiral of the Fleet, members of the Royal family, a
clergyman, and other unidentified people are walking
in procession into St. Margaret's Church, Westminster.
The occasion is probably "Remembrance Day," Aug. 4,
1918, the fourth anniversary of World War I. The Royal
family, joined by the two Houses of Parliament and representatives
of the overseas dominions and of the U.S., attend a
special service of remembrance and rededication. Queen
Alexandra and the Duke of Connaught follow Queen Mary
and King George; Princess Mary, wearing a white collar,
and Princess Victoria follow. In the second sequence,
the Royal party leaves the church followed by members
of Parliament. Final sequence consists of brief shots
of colonial troops with a British officer.
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Scenes of TR and his sons Quentin and Archie, 1917-1918
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : [s.n.], 1917-1918.
SUMMARY Unrelated segments of Quentin, Archie, and
TR at various times and locations. Medium close view
of Quentin wearing a WWI uniform standing by a wooden
shed in Mineola, New York, May 1917; long shot of Archie
in uniform astride a horse possibly in 1917; Archie
in uniform, with a cane, standing by a building possibly
in 1918; medium shot of TR speaking from the porch at
Sagamore Hill; close shot of TR sitting at the 5th Annual
International Flower Show in the Grand Central Palace,
New York City on March 20, 1917; long shot of crowds
and TR in a motorcade probably during 1917, location
unknown; TR speaking from a flag-decked platform possibly
in 1917; and TR with an unidentified man standing and
talking on outside steps of a house, identified by interior
title as in Washington, D.C.
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Scenes of TR at Sagamore Hill, 1912
CREATED/PUBLISHED [S.l.] : Pathé Frères, 1912.
SUMMARY First film footage taken of TR at Sagamore
Hill, summer of 1912. TR on his horse Sidar shakes hands
with William P. Helm, Associated Press correspondent
for New York City and Washington (1910-1918) and detailed
by AP to Wilson and TR during the 1912 campaign. TR
rides his horse away from Sagamore, returns to Sagamore,
dismounts and feeds the horse from his hand, plays with
his three dogs, and then reviews his mail assisted by
his son Archie. Final scene of TR, with axe in hand,
walking down the driveway.
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The sculptor's nightmare (in 3 parts)
CREATED/PUBLISHED United States : American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company; 1908.
SUMMARY At a political club, the members debate whose
bust will replace that of Theodore Roosevelt. Unable
to agree, each goes to a sculptor's studio and bribes
him to sculpt a bust of the individual favorite. Instead,
the sculptor spends their fees on a dinner with his
model during which he becomes so inebriated that he
is taken to jail. There hs has a nightmare, wherein
three busts are created and animated from clay (through
stop-motion photography) in the likenesses of Democrat
William Jennings Bryan and Republicans Charles W. Fairbanks
and William Howard Taft. Finally an animated bust of
Roosevelt appears.
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This
CD is created to run on both Windows and Macintosh computers
using an HTML menu to navigate to the various movies.
IMPORTANT: These CDs are designed to
be played in your computer - not your DVD player.
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