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Sagamore Hill
4m 41s
Theodore Roosevelt marries Edith Carow and they settle down in Sagamore Hill, New York.
The Roosevelts: An Intimate History chronicles the lives of Theodore, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, three members of the most prominent and influential family in American politics. Available with English audio, English captions, Spanish audio, Spanish captions, and Audio Description.
Video description: Theodore Roosevelt's political accomplishments at 26 were impressive.
Theodore Roosevelt marries Edith Carow and they settle down in Sagamore Hill, New York.
FDR remained calm when hearing of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944.
FDR opens his campaign with a humorous speech about Fala, his scottie dog.
As a young man, Theodore Roosevelt was weak, had a poor heart, and was not expected to live a very long life. Yet during his years at Harvard, he rose to popularity among the university's most prestigious clubs, fought for the lightweight boxing championship, was among the top of his class, and even fell in love.
Fighters. Mavericks. Visionaries. Uncover the intimate history of Theodore, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt with Ken Burns in The Roosevelts: An Intimate History.
Theodore Roosevelt becomes Police Commissioner of New York.
After a terrible early childhood, Eleanor Roosevelt’s Aunt “Bamie” suggests she be sent to Madame Souvestre’s girl’s school just outside London. This instills Eleanor with the characteristics of being independent-minded, intellectually alive, and socially conscious.
Ernest Hemingway once said, "The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places." Theodore, Franklin, and Eleanor Roosevelt, were all broken by life and faced their share of adversity. And, perhaps, it was the strength from their broken places that helped them to become three of the greatest leaders of this nation's history.
Eleanor embarked on a humanitarian trip on behalf of the president to the South Pacific to see the troops in hospitals. The Navy’s top command believed it was a publicity stunt, but her actions there quickly changed their minds.
Theodore Roosevelt believed in the survival of the fittest and 'might makes right.'
President McKinley is assassinated and Theodore Roosevelt becomes president.