925 research outputs found

    Letter from Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 13, 1922

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    1 leaf (double-sided)Handwritten letter from Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 13, 192

    Letter from Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 13, 1922

    No full text
    1 leaf (double-sided)Handwritten letter from Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 13, 192

    Letter from Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 15, 1922

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    2 leaves (double-sided)Handwritten letter from Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 15, 192

    Letter from Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 15, 1922

    No full text
    2 leaves (double-sided)Handwritten letter from Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E. Butler to John Sloan, December 15, 192

    Letter from Theodore Butler to John and Dolly Sloan, May 15, 1921

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    1 leaf (double-sided)Letter from Theodore Butler to John and Dolly Sloan, May 15, 192

    Letter from Theodore Butler to John and Dolly Sloan, May 15, 1921

    No full text
    1 leaf (double-sided)Letter from Theodore Butler to John and Dolly Sloan, May 15, 192

    Theodore Roosevelt in the eyes of the Allies

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    As Woodrow Wilson traveled across the Atlantic to negotiate the peace after World War I, Theodore Roosevelt died in Long Island. His passing launched a wave of commemoration in the United States that did not go unrivaled in Europe. Favorable tributes inundated the European press and coursed through the rhetoric of political speeches. This article examines the sentiment of Allied nations toward Roosevelt and argues that his posthumous image came to symbolize American intervention in the war and, subsequently, the reservations with the Treaty of Versailles, both endearing positions to the Allies that fueled tributes. Historians have long depicted Woodrow Wilson's arrival in Europe as the most celebrated reception of an American visitor, but Roosevelt's death and memory shared equal pomp in 1919 and endured long after Wilson departed. Observing this epochal moment in world history from the unique perspective of Roosevelt's passing extends the already intricate view of transnational relations

    Washington Territory legislators, probably in Seattle, 1883

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    Some of the legislators names are written on the mount, and appear to include: Goodall, Butler, Mark, Shaw, Landrum. Caption on mount: Theo. E. Peiser. 613 1/2 Front Street, (up-stairs) Handwritten on verso: Legislative Committee to visit Territorial University of Washington 1883. PH Coll 282.41To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction Please cite the Order Numbe

    Letter from Theordore Butler to John Sloan, December 12, 1923

    No full text
    1 leaf (double-sided)Letter from Theordore Butler to John Sloan, December 12, 192

    Letter from Theordore Butler to John Sloan, December 12, 1923

    No full text
    1 leaf (double-sided)Letter from Theordore Butler to John Sloan, December 12, 192
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