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Courage, Careers, and Comrades: Theodore Roosevelt and the United States Army Officer Corps

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2011

Matthew Oyos
Affiliation:
Radford University

Abstract

Theodore Roosevelt made reform of the U.S. Army Officer Corps a priority during his presidency. He felt compelled to act because of the problems that the army experienced during the war with Spain. As a volunteer soldier, Roosevelt had witnessed the shortcomings of many of the top-ranking officers in meeting the physical and organizational demands of the fighting, but he also acted because he wanted high-minded, intelligent, and physically fit leaders who could inspire his fellow citizens to a greater sense of duty in post-frontier America. Roosevelt's efforts to promote promising army officers to top commands and mandate physical fitness standards would prove disruptive, as he elevated officers out of the normal line of promotion. These practices would, in turn, generate protests in Congress and from within the military. The resulting controversies would cause Roosevelt to fall short of his goals for improving army leadership, roil civil-military relations, and demonstrate his limits as a political leader.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2011

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References

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45 Millett, “Roosevelt and His Generals,” 4–5; Frederick Funston, Memories of Two Wars: Cuban and Philippine Experiences (London, 1911), 426. A letter to Michigan senator Russell Alger, the former secretary of war, in the Leonard Wood papers lists the 93 regular officers whom MacArthur jumped. S.B.M. Young to R.A. Alger, Dec. 29, 1903, folder 4, box 32, Leonard Wood Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington.

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47 Frederick W. Marks III, Velvet on Iron: The Diplomacy of Theodore Roosevelt (Lincoln, 1979), 130–32; A well-known example of Roosevelt's use of the fait accompli in foreign policy and in naval appropriations was his sudden announcement in 1907 of the world cruise of the battleship fleet. Reckner, James R., Teddy Roosevelt's Great White Fleet (Annapolis, 1988), 1011.Google Scholar

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52 Memorandum from Henry C. Corbin, July 8, 1903, file 514783, series 25, RG 94. Elihu Root to Theodore Roosevelt, July 16, 1903, file 938273, series 25, RG 94; Theodore Roosevelt to Oswald Garrison Villard, July 17, 1903, folder 14, box 162, Root Papers; Roosevelt to Root, July 17, 1903, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 3:519; Theodore Roosevelt to Oswald Garrison Villard, July 25, 1903, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 3: 513. S.B.M. Young, Dec. 29, 1903, folder 4, box 32, Wood Papers; Millett, “Roosevelt and his Generals,” 8. Barry also would pass over only thirty-six others, which would help win Senate approval.

53 “War Chiefs of the Army,” in The World's Work: A History of Our Time, vol. 30, May 1915–Oct. 1915 (Garden City, 1915), 663, 669.

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58 Roosevelt, First Annual Message, American Presidency Project.

59 Linn, “Frontier Army,” 141–50.

60 He probably waited, as well, because of the fallout from the promotion of Leonard Wood to major general in 1904. Wood's promotion generated resistance because of his political connections, especially his friendship with the president, which preceded the Spanish-American War, during which Wood, of course, commanded the Rough Riders. Wood had also benefited from one of McKinley's promotions, moving from captain in the Medical Department to brigadier general. He jumped 530 others but was, at the time, a major general in the volunteer forces. His promotion during Roosevelt's presidency was not unusual, for he was now moving up in his turn. A strike against Wood, however, meant a strike against the president, and that made Wood a tempting target. See, S.B.M. Young to R.A. Alger, Dec. 29, 1903, folder 4, box 32, Wood Papers; Grenville Dodge to Leonard Wood, Nov. 9, 1903, folder 3, box 32, Wood Papers; U.S. Senate Committee on Military Affairs, Hearings on the Nomination of Leonard Wood to Be Major General, 58th Cong., 2nd sess. (Jan. 7, 1904), exec doc. C, 18–21.

61 Theodore Roosevelt to A. D. Andrews, Nov. 17, 1903, in Letters to Avery D. Andrews, MS Am 1454.45, Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Harvard University.

62 James H. Canfield to Frank L. Stetson, Jan. 25, 1895, file 3849 ACP 1886, microform M-1395, RG 94; news clippings, “Pershing's Big Jump” and “He Deserved Promotion,” Syracuse Herald, Sept. 17, 1906, folder 4, box 281, Pershing Papers.

63 An account of Pershing's exploits around Lake Lanao is contained in Smythe, Donald, Guerrilla Warrior: The Early Life of John J. Pershing (New York, 1973), 94110Google Scholar; Roosevelt, State Papers, 233; Newspaper Clipping, Chicago Tribune, Mar. 10, 1903, in folder 2, box 281, Pershing Papers.

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66 Theodore Roosevelt to Francis Warren, Nov. 19, 1910, folder 13, box 177, Pershing Papers.

67 George G. Dorsett to Frederick Ainsworth, Nov. 30, 1907, file 1309504, series 25, RG 94; Letcher Hardeman to John J. Pershing, Sept. 17, 1906, folder 4, box 281, Pershing Papers.

68 Washington Post, July 2, 1907.

69 Washington Post, Mar. 17, 1907.

70 Millett, “Roosevelt and His Generals,” 11–12. Thirty-one officers moved ahead of their turn, and many served a few years as generals—and some even more—before retiring.

71 For example, Senator Joseph Hawley, chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, served with distinction during the Civil War, rising to the rank of brevet major general. See “The Republican Convention,” Harper's Weekly, June 6, 1868, 362.

72 Theodore Roosevelt to Alfred Henry Lewis, Feb. 17, 1906, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 5:156–57; Morris, Theodore Rex, 439–40.

73 Theodore Roosevelt to Leonard Wood, June 4, 1904, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 4:820.

74 Army and Navy Journal, Apr. 23, 1904, 894–95, Apr. 30, 1904, 911, June 18, 1904, 1105.

75 Millett, “Roosevelt and His Generals,” 8–9. As a former volunteer general, even Senate Military Affairs Committee chair Hawley was included in the law.

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84 Archie Butt to Clara Butt, Jan. 8, 12, 14, 1909, in Butt, Archie, Letters of Archie Butt: Personal Aide to President Roosevelt, ed. Abbot, Lawrence F. (New York, 1925), 280, 283–95 (quotation 286).Google Scholar

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93 New York Times, Aug. 26, 1915.

94 Theodore Roosevelt to Archibald Roosevelt, Sept. 8, 1917, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 8:1236.

95 Theodore Roosevelt to Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Aug. 9, 1917, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 8:1222.

96 Theodore Roosevelt to Mary L. Brown, July 26, 1918, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 8:1355. Just a few days earlier, Roosevelt's mood had been much different after he heard of Quentin's first air victory. He wrote at that time that “whatever now befalls Quentin he has now had his crowded hour, and his day of honor and triumph.” Roosevelt to Ethel Roosevelt Derby, July 12, 1918, in Letters of Theodore Roosevelt, 8:1351.

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