M ADISON, Wis. (WMTV) - On this day- October 14, 1912- Theodore Roosevelt was shot in Wisconsin while he was on the campaign ...
In today’s political world it seems things are downside up and upside down at times. For those involved or politically astute this is nothing new. However with the times as they are, more people are ...
Theodore Roosevelt speaks at the 1912 Progressive National Convention in Chicago. Delegates met and nominated him to run for president as a third-party candidate. Credit: Library of Congress Editor’s ...
Col. Theodore Roosevelt defied death late yesterday when he went up in an aeroplane with Aviator Arch Hoxsey. More than ...
On October 14, 1912, former President Theodore Roosevelt was shot in downtown Milwaukee. Bleeding but undeterred, the Progressive “Bull Moose” candidate ...
Presidential historian Michael Beschloss and MSNBC's Joy Reid enjoy a new ranking of U.S. presidents by the 2024 Presidential Greatness Project Expert Survey which puts Donald Trump dead last, Barack ...
Former President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt did a whistle-stop tour of Schuylkill County towns in October 1914. After arriving in Tamaqua on October 26, he journeyed to Pottsville, where he spoke at ...
As the American Museum of Natural History prepares to remove the equestrian statue of former President Theodore Roosevelt, dueling interpretations of the legacy of the nation's 26th president stir ...
I started thinking recently about presidential elections of the early 1900s, which bear some resemblances to today. Like this year, 1912 saw a former president campaign to return to office. Similarly, ...
A near-record high share of Americans believe the two major parties are failing to represent them and that a third political ...
Theodore Roosevelt leads a Progressive crusade that splits his own party. Theodore Roosevelt leads a Progressive crusade that splits his own party, campaigns for American entry into World War I — and ...
The combative former president’s trial is shaping up to be “a legal battle that will make political history.” That was the judgment of the New York Times in a headline when Theodore Roosevelt went on ...