i15.5 TR prepares to descend the Dúvida, 27 February 1913.
i16.1 The expedition undertakes one of its many portages.
i16.2 Rondon rebaptizes the Dúvida in TR’s name. Acervo do Museu do Indio/FUNAI, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
i17.1 President Woodrow Wilson. Library of Congress.
i17.2 TR revisits Washington, 19 May 1914. Chicago Historical Society.
i19.1 TR and Alice Longworth, summer 1914.
i20.1 The Metropolitan, TR’s journalistic outlet from 1915 to 1918. Author’s collection.
i21.1 William M. Ivins. New York Public Library.
i21.2 Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. Chicago Historical Society.
i21.3 The evening newspaper that greeted TR, 7 May 1915. NewspaperArchive.com.
i22.1 TR and General Leonard Wood at Plattsburg, 25 August 1915.
i22.2 Bird life on Breton Island, La., summer 1915.
i23.1 Senator Henry Cabot Lodge.
i24.1 Flora Payne Whitney. Library of Congress.
i24.2 The U-53 pays a visit to America, 7 October 1916. Library of Congress.
i24.3 TR on the campaign trail, fall 1916.
i24.4 Secretary of War Newton D. Baker. Library of Congress.
i25.1 Arthur Balfour in Washington, April 1917. Library of Congress.
i25.2 Quentin Roosevelt, 1917.
i26.1 Theodore and Edith Roosevelt, 1917.
i27.1 Archibald Roosevelt in traction, 1918.
i28.1 Quentin photographed in front of his crashed plane, 14 July 1918.
e.1 Air Corps vigil over Sagamore Hill after TR’s death.
e.2 TR’s coffin is carried to his grave, 8 January 1919.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
EDMUND MORRIS was born in Nairobi, Kenya, in 1940. He was schooled there, and studied music, history, and literature at Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa. After leaving Africa at the age of twenty-four, he worked for six years as an advertising copywriter in London and New York. He became a full-time writer in 1972. His first book, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, began life as a screenplay. It was published in 1979 and won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. In 1985, Morris was appointed the official biographer of President Ronald Reagan. The resultant work, Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan (1999), was and remains controversial because of its unusual narrative technique. Theodore Rex (2001), the second volume of Morris’s Roosevelt trilogy, won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Biography. Before completing his trilogy with Colonel Roosevelt, Morris published a short life of Beethoven.
He lives in New York and Kent, Connecticut, with his wife and fellow biographer, Sylvia Jukes Morris.
Also by Edmund Morris:
THE RISE OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT
THEODORE REX
Colonel Roosevelt Page 107