Theodore Roosevelt: Fighting Patriot (1953) is a children’s biography of the twenty-sixth President of the United States, written by Clara Ingram Judson. The biography is just over two hundred pages long, spanning his childhood from about eight years old until his death in January 1919.
Young Theodore Roosevelt grows up in wealth and privilege, although he copes with severe childhood asthma. His later ideas of self-sufficiency seem to stem from his father’s encouragement that in the absence of a cure, Theodore find ways to help himself and make his body stronger. He already has a strong, inquisitive mind and a keen interest in natural sciences, so his father inspires him to remake his body. To that end, Theodore becomes as physically active as he can in order to manage his condition and lessen the attacks: boxing, riding horses, sailing, and rowing. He travels internationally with his family, is homeschooled, and finds adventure everywhere, even during the long, rough transatlantic crossings. He learns taxidermy and becomes very proficient at it, to the point he is able to stuff and mount many of his future hunting trophies and scientific subjects. When he is thirteen, his family realizes that he is debilitatingly nearsighted. Until then, they thought he was just awkward and clumsy. In truth, he simply did not see the holes he fell into or the logs he tripped over. Once fitted with spectacles, Theodore is amazed because he can see more than just arm’s length away, and he sets about examining the world anew. For a while, it seems Theodore will choose naturalism as his profession, although his father asks him to delay making that decision until he graduates from Harvard.
At Harvard, the freshman Theodore is often the odd man out. Short, blond, skinny, and painfully shy, he does not make friends easily. Still, he passes all his courses with a ‘C’ grade average. Unfortunately, his father passes away unexpectedly in the summer. A chastened Theodore is now the head of the family, and he vows to get serious with his studies and life choices. He brings his grades up into the 90s and decides that he will not pursue science. He considers other career paths and settles on law. Eventually, he finds a place for himself at Harvard, makes friends, and becomes engaged to a lovely girl named Alice Lee, whom he marries at the age of twenty-two.
He enrolls in Columbia’s law school, and although he finds the books boring, the theory and philosophy of the profession fascinate him. He grew up privileged, paying no heed to the human world beyond his science, but now he is exposed to ideas of class struggle, reform, politics, and the evils of institutional corruption. At twenty-three, he is elected to the State Assembly in New York. He publishes a book on naval history that garners some good reviews and joins the National Guard. Everything seems to be going his way—until his mother dies of typhoid fever and Alice dies in childbirth, within hours of each other. Heartbroken, he keeps working and champions a bill to improve the conditions of cigar makers, which passes, although is later ruled unconstitutional and struck down. After another political defeat, he retreats from public life and goes out West, where he embraces the cowboy lifestyle for a few years.
Remarried to a childhood sweetheart, Edith, he relocates back East, where he resumes his interest in politics and social justice as a police commissioner of New York City. He reads a book called
How the Other Half Lives, which opens his eyes to the realities of poverty and makes him want to do something about it. As a police commissioner, he sets about rooting out corruption, which makes him enemies among law enforcement, who are sometimes as bad as the local organized crime rings. In 1897, Theodore resigns his post in New York and becomes the Assistant Secretary of the Navy in Washington. He later resigns this post in the Navy and enlists as a soldier to fight in the Spanish-American War as one of the Rough Riders. After the war, his aspirations turn back to politics, and he becomes the governor of New York. After his governorship, the other powers that be in New York politics contrive to get rid of him and his relentless campaign to root out and destroy institutional corruption in the legislature by nominating him against his will as Vice President of the United States, with McKinley. They win the election, and when McKinley dies in office in 1901, VP Roosevelt becomes President.
As President, Roosevelt believes in progress, but he is wary of the wealthy becoming too powerful or making monopolies, and he supports the working class and its fights for higher wages and safer working conditions. He also handles foreign affairs successfully, and lives by his most famous maxim, “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” He wins the 1904 Presidential election by a landslide. His second term is characterized by the Panama Canal project and winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906 for his efforts to end the Russo-Japanese War. Roosevelt, ever the naturalist, pushes for conservation and establishes new national parks to showcase and preserve the country’s natural resources. In the next election cycle, Roosevelt loses to Taft. When the Americans enter World War I in 1914, the fifty-six-year-old Roosevelt asks the President to send him into service and is refused. Unfortunately, in July 1918, he receives word that his youngest child, Quentin, was shot down over France and killed. Roosevelt himself succumbs to a long illness and dies in January 1919.
Theodore Roosevelt: Fighting Patriot was a Newbery Medal Nominee in 1954. One feature of interest is the many illustrations done by Lorence F. Bjorklund. It is rare to go more than a few pages without a black-and-white pencil illustration of the current scene or other relevant subject matter. This book is difficult to find in hard copy, and at the time of writing this short guide, no eBook has been published. However, a decent facsimile of the book can be found in full text on Archive.org, where it is available for download in a variety of formats.