Description:

The Works of Theodore Roosevelt, New York, P.F. Collier, 1905. Illustrated Edition, 5.75" x 8". Volume I of a fourteen-volume set. Navy cloth with gilt titles to spine. Boards rubbed, with edge wear to corner and spine tips. The binding is tight and square. Boldly signed and dedicated on the front end paper in the year of publication by Theodore Roosevelt: "To The Joel Chandler Harris Library with good wishes from/Theodore Roosevelt/Nov 18th 1905" , along with a second library dedication in another hand. Library stamp of same on the front paste down, and stamped as No. 236, with additional library stamps on the title page, and four other internal page to lower margins, and to top of page block. Original tissue guard present. Single small stain to title page with the balance of the internal pages being clean with no bent pages and no writing, but with minor scattered foxing. A fantastic signed and dedicated book, signed in the year of publication during Roosevelt's visit in 1905 to Atlanta, Georgia. Theodore always considered himself to be half Northerner and half Southerner, since his mother was born and raised in Roswell, Georgia, and his parents married at her Georgian home Bulloch Hall (listed on the National Register of Historic Places). Completed in 1839, Bulloch Hall was a large Southern mansion built by slaves and trained laborers. This is an ironic twist, as the dedicatee of Roosevelt’s book was the Joel Chandler Harris library at Eatonton Public School. The library was named after school alum Joe Harris, the well-known author of the infamous “Uncle Remus” stories based on African American animal tales that the author heard recounted in slave quarters. Joel's humble background as an illegitimate, red-headed son of an Irish immigrant made him shy and insecure. By the age of 16, he had served as an apprentice on a plantation working for room and board. This helped foster an intimate connection with the slaves at that plantation and ultimately the stories he grew up with. In fact, Harris spent hundreds of hours in the slave quarters during his time off. Theodore Roosevelt was proud of his Southern heritage. He had begun his presidency on reasonably good terms for a half Northerner president, but had infuriated the South by inviting Booker T. Washington to dine in the White House. Consequently, he waited a few years until the episode blew over and finally visited Bulloch Hall in Atlanta for the first time while touring the South in 1905. At the time, Roosevelt was known to have said, "It has been my very great good fortune to have the right to claim my blood is half Southern and half Northern, and I would deny the right of any man here to feel a greater pride in the deeds of every Southerner than I feel. Of all the children, the brothers and sisters of my mother who were born and brought up in that house on the hill there, my two uncles afterward entered the Confederate service and served with the Confederate Navy." A fascinating association to Roosevelt's heritage. A scarce signed and inscribed example, with a wonderful and unique dedication.

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