Letters from an American - February 14, 2026
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February 14, 26.
On Valentine's Day in 1884,
Theodore Roosevelt lost both his wife and his mother.
Four years before, Roosevelt could not have imagined the tragedy
that would stun him in 1884.
February 14, 1880, marked one of the happiest days of his life.
He and the woman he had courted for more than a year,
Alice Hathaway Lee, had just announced their engagement.
Roosevelt was over the moon.
I can scarcely realize that I can hold her in my arms and kiss her and caress her and love her as much as I choose, he recorded in his diary.
What followed were, according to Roosevelt, three years of happiness greater and more unalloyed than I have ever known fall to the lot of others.
After they married in fall 1880, the Roosevelt's moved into the home of Theodore's mother, Martha Bullock Roosevelt.
in New York City. There they lived the life of wealthy young socialites going to fancy parties and the
opera and traveling to Europe. When Roosevelt was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1881,
they moved to the bustling town of Albany, where the state's political wire pullers worked their magic.
Roosevelt's machine politician colleagues derided the rich Harvard-educated young man as a dude,
and they tried to ignore his irritating interest in reforming society.
In the summer of 1883, Alice discovered that she was pregnant,
and that fall she moved back to New York City to live with her mother-in-law.
There she awaited the birth of the child,
who Theodore was certain would arrive on February 14th.
As headstrong as her father, Roosevelt's daughter beat her father's prediction by two days.
On February 12th, Alice gave birth to the couple of children.
first child, who would be named after her. Roosevelt was at work in Albany and learned the happy news
by telegram. But Alice was only fairly well, Roosevelt noted. She soon began sliding downhill.
She did not recover from the birth. She was suffering from something at the time called
Bright's disease, an unspecified kidney illness. Roosevelt rushed back to New York City,
but by the time he got there at midnight on February 13th, Alice was slipping into a coma.
Distraught, he held her until he received word that his mother was dangerously ill downstairs.
For more than a week, Middy Roosevelt had been sick with typhoid.
Roosevelt ran down to her room, where she died shortly after her son reached her bedside.
With his mother gone, Roosevelt hurried back to Alice.
Only hours later, she too does.
died. On February 14, 1884, Roosevelt slashed a heavy black X in his diary and wrote,
The Light has gone out of my life. He refused ever to mention Alice again.
Roosevelt's profound personal tragedy turned out to have national significance. The diseases
that killed his wife and mother were diseases of filth and crowding, the hallmarks of the
growing Gilded Age American cities.
Middy contracted typhoid from either food or water that had been contaminated by sewage
since New York City did not yet treat or manage either sewage or drinking water.
Alice's disease was probably caused by a strep infection which incubated in the teeming
city's tenements where immigrants whose wages barely kept food on the table crowded together.
Roosevelt had been interested in urban reform because he worried that incessant work and
unhealthy living conditions threatened the ability of young workers to become good citizens.
Now, though, it was clear that he and other rich New Yorkers had a personal stake in cleaning up the
cities and making sure employers paid workers a living wage. The tragedy gave him a new political
identity that enabled him to do just that. Ridiculed as a dude in his early career, Roosevelt
changed his image in the wake of the event.
of February 1884. Desperate to bury his feelings for Alice along with her, Roosevelt escaped
to Dakota territory to a ranch in which he had invested the previous year. There he rode horses,
roped cattle, and toyed with the idea of spending the rest of his life as a Western rancher. The
brutal winter of 1886, 1887 changed his mind. Months of blizzards and temperatures as low as
negative 41 degrees killed off 80% of the Dakota cattle herds. More than half of Roosevelt's cattle
died. Roosevelt decided to go back to Eastern politics, but this time no one would be able to make
fun of him as a dude. In an era when the independent American cowboy dominated the popular imagination,
Roosevelt now had credentials as a Westerner. He ran for political office as a Western cowboy, taking on
corruption in the East. And with that cowboy image, he overtook his eastern rivals.
Eventually, Roosevelt's successes made establishment politicians so nervous they tried to bury him in what
was then seen as the graveyard of the vice presidency. Then, in 1901, an unemployed steel worker
assassinated President William McKinley and put Roosevelt, that damned cowboy, as one of McKinley's
advisors called him, into the White House. Once there, he worked to clean up the cities and stop
the exploitation of workers, backing the urban reforms that were the hallmark of the progressive
era. Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at
SoundScape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts, recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
