Theodore Roosevelt Timeline

Part of the Addressing the Statue exhibition.

This timeline is part of the Addressing the Statue exhibition, which offers context for the Theodore Roosevelt equestrian statue on the Museum’s front steps.
1858
A toddler-aged Theodore Roosevelt sits for a formal portrait wearing a sailor-style hat and holding a small bucket.

October 27: Born in New York City. Nearsighted and frequently ill with asthma during childhood, he nonetheless loved the outdoors and the natural world.

1869
A stern portrait of Theodore Roosevelt's father, Roosevelt Sr, seated in a chair.

April: Theodore’s father, Roosevelt Sr., helps establish the American Museum of Natural History, signing its charter in the family living room.

1876
A portrait of college-aged Theodore Roosevelt, in which he sports thick sideburns.

Fall: Enters Harvard University, originally studying natural history—but eventually changing to history and government.

1881
A group portrait with Theodore Roosevelt seated with fifteen other members of the New York State Assembly.

November: At age 23, elected to New York State Assembly (members pictured above), Roosevelt’s first elective office.

1884
Theodore Roosevelt stands next to a horse in a field.

June: Moves to the Dakotas; later chronicles his experiences in lectures and The Winning of the West.

1886

Disturbing views of Native Americans: Speaking in New York City in January 1886, Roosevelt gave a lecture entitled “Ranch Life in the West” that expressed disturbing views of Native Americans.

“I don't go so far as to think that the only good Indians are the dead Indians, but I believe nine out of every 10 are and I shouldn’t like to inquire too closely into the case of the 10th.”

1898
Illustration of Theodore Roosevelt astride a horse and carrying a sword during his time in the army.

Summer: As a colonel in the army, gains national fame as a war hero after leading a regiment of cavalry volunteers known as “Rough Riders” in Cuba during the Spanish-American War.

1898
Portraits of New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt (left) and Lieutenant Governor Timothy L. Woodruff (right).

November: Elected governor of New York.

1900
Portraits of President William McKinley (left) and vice-president Theodore Roosevelt (right).

November: Elected U.S. vice-president under President William McKinley; after McKinley is assassinated in 1901, Roosevelt becomes the youngest-ever U.S. president. In 1904, he is elected for a second term.

1901
Booker T. Washington (left) and Theodore Roosevelt (right) are seated at a small round table that is set for dinner.

October: Invites prominent educator and author Booker T. Washington to dinner; the event is the first time a U.S. president meets formally with an African-American in the White House.

1902
Aerial view of the sunrise over Crater Lake.

May: Establishes Crater Lake National Park—the first of five national parks created during his presidency. His conservation efforts place more than 230 million acres of U.S. land under government protection through the creation or expansion of national parks, national forests and other refuges.

1904
Political cartoon depicts Theodore Roosevelt carrying a big stick and dragging a string of small boats behind him.

December: Issues “Roosevelt Corollary” to Monroe Doctrine, arguing that the U.S. can act as “an international police power” and intervene in Latin America.

1905
Wooden sign in the foreground reads "Shoshone National Forest", with snowcapped mountains in view behind it.

February: Establishes National Forest Service; 150 national forests are eventually created or enlarged during his term.

1906
A newspaper clipping with three group portraits of black infantrymen.

August: After one white man is killed and another injured in Brownsville, Texas, local civilians blame African-American soldiers stationed nearby. Despite a lack of evidence, Roosevelt orders the dishonorable discharge of 167 black infantrymen. The army reverses the decision in 1972, declaring the soldiers innocent.

1906
The Nobel Peace Prize, comprised of a gold medal embedded in a lucite plaque.

December: Awarded Nobel Peace Prize for facilitating negotiations that end Russo-Japanese War.

1906

In his book Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter (1906) Roosevelt described his love of nature.

“It is an incalculable added pleasure to any one’s sum of happiness if he or she grows to know, even slightly and imperfectly, how to read and enjoy the wonder-book of nature.”

1907

February: Signs Immigration Act of 1907, which allows president to restrict number of immigrants from Japan.

1907

December: Sends the “Great White Fleet,” which included 16 Navy battleships painted white carrying 14,000 sailors, on a 14-month tour around the world in a dramatic display of U.S. naval power.

1907
A dozen woman are seated at an assembly line in a factory, with two supervisors standing behind them.

December: Uses State of the Union address to propose protection for workers, including eight-hour work day. 

1909
Theodore Roosevelt (right) and his son Kermit (left) are holding rifles, seated on a water buffalo they hunted and killed.

March: Presidency ends; Roosevelt and his son Kermit (left) spend a year on safari with the Smithsonian-Roosevelt African Expedition; most of the thousands of animals brought back are now in the collections of the Smithsonian Museum, and some at the American Museum of Natural History.

1909

Racist views: Passages from Roosevelt’s book about his travels through East Africa, African Game Trails (1910), contain racist descriptions of the people he met.

“But most of the [African] natives are still wild pagans, and many of them are unchanged in the slightest [from when] they alone were the heirs of the land—a land which they were utterly powerless in any way to improve.” 

1912

Progressive policies: Roosevelt spoke of the need to improve the lives of all Americans in a speech to the Republican National Convention in June 1912.

“We believe that this country will not be a permanently good place for any of us to live in unless we make it a reasonably good place for all of us to live in.”

1912

Importance of Conservation: Roosevelt spoke about preserving the natural world in a speech to the Progressive Party National Convention in August 1912.

“There can be no greater issue than that of conservation in this country.”

1913
Native American dwellings atop cliffs in Arizona.

August: Travels to Navajo and Hopi reservations in Arizona. Impressed by Native art and technology, he advocates for the preservation of living Native cultures.

1918

“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President…is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. Nothing but the truth should be spoken about him or anyone else. But it is even more important to tell the truth, pleasant or unpleasant, about him than about anyone else.”

–Theodore Roosevelt, Editorial in the Kansas City Star, May 7, 1918

1919
Six pallbearers carry a coffin draped in an american flag, which contains the remains of Theodore Roosevelt.

January 6: Dies in his sleep at age 60 at his Sagamore Hill home in New York.