President Roosevelt’s Bar Fight and More Quirky and Creepy Presidential Facts

President Roosevelt’s Bar Fight and More Quirky and Creepy Presidential Facts

Khalid Elhassan - November 15, 2021

President Roosevelt’s Bar Fight and More Quirky and Creepy Presidential Facts
Teddy Roosevelt at Harvard in 1879. Fine Art America

29. When Teddy Roosevelt Decided to Give Up Politics

Teddy Roosevelt went to Harvard, where he boxed and rowed. He was good enough at the former to make it to second place in a Harvard boxing tournament. After Harvard, Teddy spent a year at Columbia Law School, before he dropped out in 1881 to serve in the New York State Assembly. His political career showed early promise, and he made a name for himself, especially in his efforts against corporate corruption. Then came 1884, a truly terrible year for the future president.

On Valentine’s Day, February 14th, two days after she gave birth to their daughter Alice, his wife died. His mother followed her a few hours later. The only entry on his diary that day was an ‘X’, and the notation “The light has gone out of my life”. That summer, he attended the GOP National Convention in Chicago, but his candidate lost. The personal and political setbacks in quick succession caused Teddy to feel burned out, so he decided to quit politics and move out West. He had visited the Dakota Territory in 1883 to hunt buffalo and fell in love with the western lifestyle. So he invested $14,000 – a significant amount in those days – to become a rancher.

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