The Wilderness Warrior - Douglas Brinkley [562]
2. John Milton Cooper, “Theodore Roosevelt: On Clio’s Active Service,” The Virginia Quarterly Review (Winter 1986), pp. 21–37.
3. T.R. to George Otto Trevelyan (January 25, 1904).
4. George Bird Grinnell, “Preface” in George Bird Grinnell (ed.), American Big Game in Its Haunts (New York: Forest and Stream, 1904), pp. 19–20.
5. George Bird Grinnell, “Theodore Roosevelt,” ibid., pp. 19–21.
6. T.R., “Wilderness Reserves,” ibid., pp. 20–51. (T.R. included this essay a year later in his Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter, giving it a more widespread readership.)
7. Ibid., p. 51.
8. T.R. to James Wilson (March 12, 1904).
9. T.R. to Lawrence Fraser Abbot (March 14, 1904).
10. Lewis L. Gould, The Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1991), pp. 101–104.
11. Barbara Kerley, “Josiah, the White House Badger,” Highlights (April 2006), pp. 32–33.
12. Jacob Riis, Theodore Roosevelt: The Citizen (New York: Macmillan, 1904), pp. 318–319.
13. T.R., An Autobiography (New York: Macmillan, 1913), p. 357.
14. Ibid., pp. 355–357.
15. “Pets at White House,” Washington Post (January 22, 1907), p. 18.
16. “Pet Lamb for Theodore Roosevelt Jr.,” New York Times (October 9, 1902), p. 9.
17. T.R. to Kermit Roosevelt (January 8, 1903).
18. Ibid.
19. T.R. to Kermit Roosevelt (January 18, 1904).
20. Washington Evening Star (January 22, 1908). White House Historical Assocation archives (2009 updated).
21. Irwin Hood Hoover, Forty-Two Years in the White House (Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 1934), p. 28.
22. “Archie Roosevelt Is Ill,” New York Times (April 14, 1903), p. 1.
23. “Pony in the White House,” New York Times (April 27, 1903), p. 1. Also Sagamore Hill Pet Archive, Oyster Bay, N.Y.
24. “Pets at White House,” Washington Post (January 22, 1907), p. 18.
25. Ibid.
26. “Menelik to Roosevelt,” New York Times (March 5, 1904), p. 2.
27. Steve Kemper, “Who’s Laughing Now?,” Smithsonian (May 2008).
28. “Roosevelt Dog Is Found,” New York Times (October 1, 1909), p. 20.
29. “Cultural Landscape Report by Sagamore Hill National Historic Site” (prepared by Regina M. Bellavia and George W. Curry), Sagamore Hill National Historic Site Archive, Oyster Bay, N.Y. (2003 reprint.)
30. Jenks Cameron, The Bureau of Biological Survey (New York: Arno, 1974), pp. 110–111.
31. Minutes of Executive Committee of Boone and Crockett Club (October 27, 1913). (Transcript.)
32. T.R. to John F. Lacey (April 21, 1904).
33. Cameron, The Bureau of Biological Survey, pp. 113–116.
34. “Ranger Boats,” Tongass National Forest Facts, Tongass National Forest (history file).
35. T.R. to Kentaro Kaneko (April 23, 1904).
36. T.R. quoted in The Russo-Japanese War Research Society (February 1904–September 1905) time line. Online study group.
37. Timothy Foote, “Where the Gooney Birds Are,” Smithsonian Magazine (September 2001), p. 95.
38. Donald J. Pisani, Water, Land, Law in the West: The Limits of Public Policy, 1850–1920 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1996), p. 116.
39. “President Opens Fair with Golden Button,” New York Times (May 1, 1904), p. 1.
40. Enos A. Mills, Your National Parks (Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 1917), pp. 244–245.
41. North Dakota: A Guide for the Northern Prairie State (New York: Oxford University Press, 1950), p. 256. (This is a revised edition of the first printing in 1938.)
42. George Bird Grinnell, “Forest Reserves of North Dakota,” in American Big Game in Its Haunts, pp. 458–466.
43. Joseph Maxwell, “Sullys Hill National Game Preserve,” North Dakota Outdoors (March 2003), p. 22. The USDA used Sully’s during the T.R. years but today its Sullys. The apostrophe has been deleted. 44. T.R. to Edward Howe Forbush (July 21, 1904).
45. “Early State Forestry Efforts” (Washington, D.C.: Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture Brochure No. 9, 2008). Part of the Mini-histories of the Forest Service Series.
46. T.R. to James Rudolph Garfield (July 13, 1904).
47 Buffalo Jones to T.R. (July