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Edith Kermit Roosevelt - Creating the Modern First Lady (Paperback)
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Edith Kermit Roosevelt - Creating the Modern First Lady (Paperback)
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Few first ladies have enjoyed a better reputation among historians
than Edith Kermit Roosevelt. Aristocratic and sophisticated,
tasteful and discreet, she managed the White House with a sure
hand. Her admirers say that she never slipped in carrying out her
duties as hostess, mother, and adviser to her husband. Lewis
Gould's path-breaking study, however, presents a more complex and
interesting figure than the somewhat secularized saint Edith
Roosevelt has become in the literature on first ladies. While many
who knew her found her inspiring and gracious, family members also
recalled a more astringent and sometimes nasty personality. Gould
looks beneath the surface of her life to examine the intricate
legacy of her tenure from 1901 to 1909. The narrative in this book
thus uncovers much new about Edith Roosevelt. Far from being averse
to activism, Edith Roosevelt served as a celebrity sponsor at a New
York musical benefit and also intervened in a high-profile custody
dispute. Gould traces her role in the failed marriage of a United
States senator, her efforts to secure the ambassador from Great
Britain that she wanted, and the growing tension between her and
Helen Taft in 1908-1909. Her commitment to bringing classical music
artists to the White House, along with other popular performers,
receives the fullest attention to date. Gould also casts a
skeptical eye over the area where Edith Roosevelt's standing has
been strongest, her role as a mother. He looks at how she and her
husband performed as parents and dissents from the accustomed
judgment that all was well with the way the Roosevelt offspring
developed. Most important of all, Gould reveals the first lady's
deep animus toward African Americans and their place in American
society. She believed ""that any mixture of races is an unmitigated
evil."" The impact of her bigotry on Theodore Roosevelt's racial
policies must now be an element in any future discussion of that
sensitive subject. On balance, Gould finds that Edith Roosevelt
played an important and creative part in how the institution of the
first lady developed during the twentieth century. His sprightly
retelling of her White House years will likely provoke controversy
and debate. All those interested in how the role of the
presidential wife has evolved will find in this stimulating book a
major contribution to the literature on a fascinating president. It
also brings to life a first lady whose legacy must now be seen in a
more nuanced and challenging light.
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