Agree, yes, to a certain extent.
Teddy Roosevelt was born an Aristocrat. When he decided to enter Politics instead of the Business World, he knew he would have to te-invent his image.
He did. At first through a slick promotion campaign, (he had a portrait done of him dressed in frontier cloths, with a $500 Tiffinay Knife in the belt), but later proved his worth when he answered the call and joined the Army to fight in the Spanish American War, were he did distinguish himself.
He became President by shear accident. The four Robber Barron's of the era actually paid the system off in order to make home William MKinnley's VP, more or less neutralizing him. They ha no idea that MKInnley would be assassinated, making their worst fears a reality.
Roosevelt then went after Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morga, and Vanderbuilt with a vengeance, basically paving the way for the breakup of their empires.
He is the father of the Progressive Movement. But his version has little in common with the modern "from tit to grave" social welfare system that permeates the Progressive/liberal/socialist ideas of today.
Yes, Teddy Roosevely was a good President. He was also a flawed man. Whether his good outweighs his flaws depends on your personal perspective.
Originally Posted by Jackie S
A few corrections; Roosevelt never joined the US Army. He created the 1st American Volunteer Group and was it's second in command (until he got promoted) but that was not the US Army.
Roosevelt was a sickly child who wore glasses. Instead of having to "reinvent himself", he put himself throught a tough regimen of exercise and outdoor living to toughen himself up. Just because the knife was a Tiffany, don't think that he was fake or born in Kenya.
I would hardly call him the father of the progressive movement. He was one of it's biggest supporters but it existed long before he became the president. As for going after the monopolies...when the US went into a depression, TR went to those rich people and asked for a bailout for the country. He got it. Kind of the opposite of Obama.
FYI, that is Carnegie, Morgan, Vanderbilt, and Rockefeller.