________________________________
From: Billy Rojas
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2018



Why Teddy Roosevelt Is Popular On Both Sides of the Political Aisle
A historian considers the forces that have shaped the Rough Rider’s 
presidential legacy in the decades since his death nearly 100 years ago

By Michael Patrick Cullinane, Zócalo Public 
Square<http://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/2018/04/20/liberals-conservatives-claim-theodore-roosevelt/ideas/essay/?xid=PS_smithsonian>
smithsonian.com
April 23, 2018


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A president’s career can extend well beyond his death, as family, friends, and 
fans work tirelessly to maintain his legacy and image.


For roughly 10 years, I have studied the legacy of the 26th president, Theodore 
Roosevelt. Even after a decade, I continue to be astounded by how regularly 
Roosevelt is invoked in politics and beyond.

Today, TR is ubiquitous. If you follow sports, you may have seen Teddy 
Goalsevelt, the self-appointed mascot for Team USA soccer who ran for FIFA 
president in 2016. Or you may have watched the giant-headed Roosevelt who 
rarely wins the Presidents’ Race at Washington Nationals baseball games. If you 
enjoy the cinema, you will likely recall Robin Williams as Roosevelt in the 
Night at the Museum trilogy, or might know that a biopic starring Leonardo 
DiCaprio as Roosevelt is slated for production.


In politics, Roosevelt has become the rare figure popular with both left and 
right. Vice President Mike Pence recently compared his boss Donald Trump to 
Roosevelt; in 2016, candidate Hillary Clinton named the Rough Rider as her 
political lodestar. Environmentalists celebrate Roosevelt as the founding 
father of conservation and a wilderness warrior, and small business interests 
celebrate his battles against large corporations.

And more than a century after he was shot in Milwaukee during the 1912 
presidential campaign, Roosevelt remains a target; last year, his statue in 
front of the Museum of Natural History in New York was splattered in red paint 
in protest of its symbolic 
relationship<https://hyperallergic.com/407921/activists-splatter-roosevelt-monument-amnh/>
 to white supremacy, among other things.


Roosevelt’s high profile is no mere accident of history. Shortly after 
Roosevelt’s death, two memorial associations organized and worked to perpetuate 
his legacy.


One of these organizations sought to tie Roosevelt to the politics of the early 
20th century, and cast him as a national icon of Americanism. At that time, 
Americanism stood for patriotism and civic-mindedness, as well as 
anti-communism and anti-immigration. This ideology helped Republicans win back 
the White House in 1920, but it also galvanized the first Red Scare.


The second memorial organization rejected the political approach to 
commemoration, choosing to represent Roosevelt’s legacy in artistic, creative, 
and utilitarian forms, including monuments, films, artwork, and by applying the 
Roosevelt name to bridges and buildings. Of course, some of these activities 
had implicit political angles, but they generally avoided association with 
overt causes, in favor of historical commemoration. When it came to 
fundraising, the apolitical organization raised 10 times as much income as the 
political one, and within ten years the two organizations folded into a single 
memorial association that abandoned political interpretations. Roosevelt became 
bipartisan and polygonal.


This is not to say Roosevelt’s legacy lost all meaning. Quite the opposite; our 
perception of Roosevelt has endured a number of declines and revivals. And, 
through the rounds of historical revision and re-revision, he has maintained 
certain characteristics.


His civic-minded Americanism endures, as does his record as a conservationist 
and a progressive. Roosevelt still evokes an image of an American cowboy, a 
preacher of righteousness, and a leading intellectual.

Most interestingly, these elements of his legacy are not mutually exclusive. 
Invoking one does not require us to exclude another. For example, Barack Obama 
promoted the Affordable Care Act in 2010 by memorializing Roosevelt’s advocacy 
for national healthcare in 1911. Obama could recall Roosevelt’s progressivism 
while avoiding the Bull Moose’s mixed record on race relations or his support 
of American imperialism. In short, commemorators can take from Roosevelt what 
they want and, consequently, his legacy grows ever more complex and elastic.


The upcoming centenary of Roosevelt’s death in January 2019 offers us an 
opportunity to understand more about how presidential legacies are shaped by 
successive generations. Images of former presidents come from various sources, 
and because they can act as a powerful emblem for any cause, their images 
proliferate without much scrutiny.


Politicians are well aware of this. Sarah Palin, a right-wing Republican, 
co-opted the legacy of Democrat Harry Truman in her 2008 vice-presidential 
nomination speech, and Barack Obama had a penchant for invoking Ronald Reagan. 
In a political swamp full of alligators, summoning the ghosts of dead 
presidents is relatively safe ground.

Likewise, commercial advertisers take great liberty with the past. Beer and 
whiskey producers have long used presidents as brand ambassadors (Old Hickory 
bourbon and Budweiser are good examples). Automobile companies have named 
vehicles for Washington, Monroe, Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland, and Roosevelt.

These contemporary invocations remind us of the real value of legacy, however 
it might be interpreted. The past has meaning for the present, and that meaning 
can be translated into advantage. Truth is not the highest value in the contest 
between presidential ghosts.


Despite being the subject of scholarly historical biographies that document 
their lives with precision and care, American presidents are dogged by 
half-truths, myths, and arbitrary citations in public memory. At a time when 
our political climate is referred to as “post-truth,” and a celebrity tycoon 
who has mastered the art of self-promotion sits in the Oval Office, it is worth 
reflecting on how these legacies are produced.

If, as philosopher Williams James once said, “The use of a life is to spend it 
for something that outlasts it,” the former American presidents have lived 
boundlessly productive lives, with legacies that far outlast their tenure. But 
because their legacies are produced by successive generations, they often tell 
us more about the agents of commemoration than the men who sat behind the 
Resolute Desk.


Examining presidential legacies helps us solve a historical problem: It allows 
us to see who shapes our perceptions of the past. Memorializers lay claim to 
historical narratives and create the illusion of public memory, invoking select 
elements of our shared past as shiny baubles to emulate and admire. So by 
understanding these myths, the mythmakers, and the motives of memorialization, 
we can see a laminated past with countless layers. The more myths and the more 
layers, the more insight we gain into the ways the past connects with the 
present, and the present with the future.


The “real” Theodore Roosevelt is lost to us. He is an imagined character, even 
to family. Theodore Roosevelt’s grandson Archie met his grandfather only once. 
Still, every time he visited Sagamore Hill—his grandfather’s home in Oyster 
Bay, Long Island—he sensed his ghost. Archie felt that TR’s spirit looked over 
the kids as they played. On numerous occasions Archie reflected on his 
grandfather’s likely expectations for his family and even attempted to model 
his life on that conception. “We knew him only as a ghost,” Archie related, 
“but what a merry, vital, and energetic ghost he was. And how much 
encouragement and strength he left behind to help us play the role Fate has 
assigned us for the rest of the century.”


Indeed, conjuring Roosevelt’s ghost gives us another means of observing the 
last century, a period of time that Roosevelt himself never saw. Because so 
many have invoked Roosevelt in the way Archie did, examining his legacy helps 
to illustrate the motives and judgements of those who remember the past. 
Theodore Roosevelt’s ghost continues to haunt public memory because we continue 
to conjure it. TR has been dead for a century, but we refuse to let him rest in 
peace, believing the use of his life can help us achieve our ends.








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