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Theodore Roosevelt Quotes

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“Speak softly and carry a big stick”(Theodore Roosevelt - 163 Quotes." Theodore Roosevelt - 163 Quotes. N.p., n.d. Web.) arguably the most famous words spoken by a U.S. President and the words that are what our country and government stands by. To start Teddy roosevelt never actually wanted to become president. He went to Harvard university where he met the love of his life Alice Hathaway Lee. After they were married Teddy enrolled in Columbia Law school and dropped out after one year to pursue a career in public service. He was elected to the New York Assembly and served two terms from 1882 to 1884.(Milkis, Sidney. "Miller Center." Theodore Roosevelt: Domestic Affairs-. N.p., n.d. Web). 1884 was tough for Teddy though, On February 12th his …show more content…

The population of the United States had almost doubled from 1870 to 1900 because of immigrants coming into the country to work in a growing factory industry. One of Roosevelt's biggest beliefs was that the government had the right to regulate big business to protect the welfare of society.(Milkis, Sidney. "Miller Center." Theodore Roosevelt: Domestic Affairs-. N.p., n.d. Web). Roosevelt believed that the government should use its resources to help achieve economic and social justice. When the country faced a staggering coal shortage in the fall of 1902 because of a strike in Pennsylvania the President thought he should step in. Roosevelt decided to call in the mine owners and the representatives of labor to the white house to work out the predicament. When the two sides refused to talk Teddy devised a plan to get the two sides to communicate. His plan was the “ square deal” and it was that instead of sending federal troops to break the strike and force the miners back to work, Roosevelt threatened to use troops to take the mines and run them as a federal operation.(Milkis, Sidney. "Miller Center." Theodore Roosevelt: Domestic Affairs-. N.p., n.d. Web). The Square Deal worked to balance competing interests to create a fair deal for all sides: labor and management, consumer and business, developer and conservationist. Everywhere Roosevelt went he expressed the need to preserve environment as a place of refuge. He identified the American character with the nation's wilderness regions, believing that our western and frontier heritage had shaped American values, behavior, and culture. He preserved 200 million acres of land for national parks and reserves during his presidency. In 1902 Roosevelt signed the Newlands Reclamation bill which used money from federal land sales to build reservoirs and irrigation systems for agriculture in the desperate

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