Wild West

10 TIDBITS ABOUT THEODORE ROOSEVELT

1 Avid Reader: Roosevelt averaged two books a week. While chasing boat thieves in Dakota Territory in the spring of 1886 he brought along Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina.

2 Working Hand: Riding herd in the spring of 1885, he spent one 40-hour stretch in the saddle, later stating, “Nobody ever gets enough sleep on a roundup.”

3 Bully for Bison: Roosevelt helped launch a bison breeding program in New York City at the Bronx Zoo, directed by zoologist William Temple Hornaday. As president he created the National Bison Range in western Montana, now home to upward of 350 bison.

During his 1903 “Great Loop Tour” of the West the president took a 65-mile horseback ride from Laramie to Cheyenne, Wyo. Among

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wild West

Wild West11 min read
The One and Only Booger
The horse was once as essential to Western life as the six-gun, and breaking horses was once a necessary skill, even a business for a few tough, enterprising souls. Eventually it became a competitive rodeo event in which working cowboys pitted their
Wild West1 min read
Hollywood Cool
Are you a fan of Western films but don’t recognize the name John R. Hamilton? You’re not alone, though you’ve likely seen celebrity portraits the photographer snapped at more than 70 Western movie locations from the 1940s through the ’90s. A sergeant
Wild West3 min read
Friends To The Death
It’s said you can judge a person’s character by the company he keeps. Wyatt Earp’s pallbearers [at his Jan. 16, 1929, funeral in Los Angeles, mentioned in “Earp Fellow Sophisticates,” by Don Chaput and David D. de Haas, online at HistoryNet.com] incl

Related