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Books > History > World history > From 1900
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Taking on Theodore Roosevelt - How One Senator Defied the President on Brownsville and Shook American Politics (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R545
Discovery Miles 5 450
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Taking on Theodore Roosevelt - How One Senator Defied the President on Brownsville and Shook American Politics (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R545
Discovery Miles 5 450
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
In August 1906, black soldiers stationed in Brownsville, Texas,
were accused of going on a lawless rampage in which shots were
fired, one man was killed, and another wounded. Because the
perpetrators could never be positively identified, President
Theodore Roosevelt took the highly unusual step of discharging
without honor all one hundred sixty-seven members of the black
battalion on duty the night of the shooting. This book investigates
the controversial action of an otherwise much-lauded president, the
challenge to his decision from a senator of his own party, and the
way in which Roosevelt's uncompromising stance affected African
American support of the party of Lincoln. Using primary sources to
reconstruct the events, attorney Harry Lembeck begins at the end
when Senator Joseph Foraker is honored by the black community in
Washington, DC, for his efforts to reverse Roosevelt's decision.
Lembeck highlights Foraker's courageous resistance to his own
president. In addition, he examines the larger context of racism in
the era of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois, pointing out
that Roosevelt treated discrimination against the Japanese in the
West much differently. He also notes often-ignored evidence
concerning the role of Roosevelt's illegitimate cousin in the
president's decision, the possibility that Foraker and Roosevelt
had discussed a compromise, and other hitherto overlooked facts
about the case. Sixty-seven years after the event, President
Richard Nixon finally undid Roosevelt's action by honorably
discharging the men of the Brownsville Battalion. But, as this
thoroughly researched and engrossing narrative shows, the damage
done to both Roosevelt's reputation and black support for the
Republican Party lingers to this day.
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