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Narrator (History Daily Host - Lindsey Graham)
It's June 15, 1912 at La Salle Street Station in Chicago, Illinois. 53 year old former President Theodore Roosevelt looks out from the window of his rail car as the train eases into the station, draping the platform in smoke and steam. A large crowd is waiting for him. They've come to welcome Roosevelt to Chicago ahead of the Republican National Convention. They wave flags and cheer as the locomotive comes to a stop with a gentle shudder. Roosevelt takes a deep breath, places a slouch style cowboy hat on his head and then steps out to greet the crowd. Cameras flash and a brass band starts playing as Roosevelt's supporters surge forward. Roosevelt beams as he makes his way through the crowd, shaking as many hands as the people here don't seem to mind that he shouldn't even be in Chicago right now. Usually presidential nominees keep their distance from party conventions, expected to keep their hands clean and remain above the fray. But Roosevelt has already broken one tradition by seeking a third term as president and believing that the soul of the Republican Party is at stake, he's more than willing to break another. After all, if that's what it takes to reclaim the White House, then that's what he's going to do. Despite the rapturous welcome at the train station, Theodore Roosevelt knows that not everyone in Chicago is pleased to see him. Only a few days ago, the Republican National Committee made the controversial decision to hand hundreds of delegates to Roosevelt's rival, William Howard Taft, Roosevelt's former protege and and his successor as president. But Roosevelt vowed to fight on, even though he knows the odds are stacked against him and soon he will take dramatic action. The course of Roosevelt's career and the political future of the United States will be turned on its head after the Republican National Convention begins on June 18, 1912.
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Narrator (History Daily Host - Lindsey Graham)
From Noiser and Airship I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is History. Daily. History is made every day on this podcast. Every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is June 18, 1912. Theodore Roosevelt splits the Republican Party.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
Foreign
Narrator (History Daily Host - Lindsey Graham)
It's April 11, 1910, in Porto Maurizio, a small town in northwestern Italy, two years before the contested Republican National Convention. In a hotel overlooking the harbor, former President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt leans heavily against a desk, a pen clutched tight in his hand. Outside the window, lush green hills roll toward the turquoise sea white Linen curtains billow softly in the breeze. It's a perfect spring day, but Roosevelt has barely noticed. He's writing to an old friend, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, and he's choosing every word carefully. For months now, Lodge has been sending letters from the other side of the Atlantic, each asking the same question that Roosevelt has tried politely to avoid. Lodge wants to know whether Roosevelt will run for president again. Roosevelt has already served seven and a half years in the White House. He became President suddenly after the assassination of William McKinley in 1901. And he made an immediate impact with radical reforms to corporate regulation and policies of conservation of America's wilderness. But not everyone in the Republican party supported these policies. Still, after Roosevelt Left office in 1909, he was confident that his hand picked successor was William Howard Taft would build on his legacy. And since leaving the White House, Roosevelt has given Taft space to find his footing. Roosevelt's enjoyed a 10 month safari in East Africa, hunting game on the vast plains. And now he's in the middle of a European tour, visiting Budapest, Vienna, Oslo and Paris, attending banquets and delivering speeches. Just yesterday, the people of Porto Maurizio held a parade for him and renamed a street in their town in his honor. But through letters and newspapers, Roosevelt knows events back home are taking an unsettling turn. Political allies like Senator Lodge are worried about the direction Taft is taking both the Republican Party and the country. Many of Roosevelt's supporters have been quietly pushed aside, replaced by conservatives with less interest in reform. And now many progressive Republicans are begging Roosevelt to make a return to the political arena and even challenged Taft for the nomination for the Republican candidate for President. So today, Roosevelt's pen pauses as he contemplates what to write next. Announcing his intention to return to the White House would be momentous. Ever since George Washington chose to retire in 1797, American presidents have respected an unwritten tradition of only serving two terms. Roosevelt himself told the country back in 1904 that he believed in the two term limit and he wouldn't seek a third. He wants to keep that promise, but he also believes that it's his duty to serve if his country needs him. A knock at the door breaks Roosevelt's concentration and grateful for the interruption, he lays his pen aside. Opening the door, he finds a familiar face. Gifford Pinchot, a former chief of the Forest Service and one of Roosevelt's closest allies. Gifford has recently been fired by President Taft after the two men publicly fell out over conservation issues. And now, standing in Roosevelt's doorway, thousands of miles from home, Pinchot clearly has a great deal to get off his chest. Roosevelt slaps his friend on the shoulder and says he knows the perfect place for them to discuss the growing political crisis back home. So that afternoon, the two men set off into the hills above the town. There, Gifford outlines his concerns, claiming that coal lands in Alaska have been put into private hands and that rights to water supplies have been given to corporations eager to profit from public resources. As they talk, the two men stroll through olive groves in a pristine, untouched landscape, the kind of natural beauty that both men are desperate to protect back in America. Roosevelt listens to Pinchot without saying much. But with every step into the hills, his worries mount. As far as he's concerned, President Taft is dismantling his legacy and taking the Republican party in a troubling new direction. So that evening, Roosevelt returns to his unfinished letter. When he started it, he was adamant that his political career was over. He was determined to enjoy a long retirement, write books, travel the world and hunt big game. But now he's not so sure. Still, he doesn't commit to anything. It's only when Roosevelt completes his grand tour and returns to America that he will make a decision there. Back home, he'll see for himself how President Taft has abandoned the progressive ideals they once shared. And Roosevelt was will become determined to stop Taft from winning re election, even if that means upending America's entire political landscape in the process.
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Narrator (History Daily Host - Lindsey Graham)
It's the evening of June 18, 1912, in Chicago, Illinois, four months after Theodore Roosevelt decided to seek a third term in office. In a suite in the Congress Hotel, Roosevelt paces the carpet, simmering with frustrated energy. The Republican National Convention has begun at the Chicago Coliseum, and it's just a few blocks away, but it might as well be on the other side of the country. Roosevelt has broken with protocol simply by traveling to the city. It would be even more irregular for him to appear on the convention floor in person, so instead he's keeping his distance, confined to his rooms, tracking events through messages, telephone calls and whispered updates. When Roosevelt first launched his campaign for a third term, his momentum seemed unstoppable. Several states had recently adopted presidential primaries, giving ordinary voters a limited role in the new nomination process that helped Roosevelt dominate, winning 278 delegates, compared to just 48 for incumbent President William Howard Taft. But that was not enough for Roosevelt to claim victory. Hundreds of other delegates were still chosen in the traditional way, through caucuses, state conventions and party organizations. Those were dominated by establishment figures, men with conservative values and little appetite for progressive reforms. And they over overwhelmingly back Taft, which meant a week before the convention opened in Chicago, Roosevelt was still narrowly in the lead. But there were 254 contested delegates, and the Republican National Committee decided to give the vast majority of these to Taft. Roosevelt was outraged. He condemned what he saw as steamroller tactics, silencing the voice of American voters, but complaining in the press wasn't going to help him. His one remaining option was to break with traditional and traveled to Chicago to fight the decision on the ground. And now he's here in the Congress Hotel, as close as he can get to the convention itself, waiting for news. The telephone rings and Roosevelt stops pacing. He picks up the receiver and listens in silence, his jaw slowly tightening as the voice on the line tells him that the vote to select the convention chairman has gone against him. Roosevelt hoped for someone sympathetic to his plight, someone who would be willing to bend the rules and revisit the allocation of delegates. But instead, they've elected a staunch conservative and Taft loyalist. So all night and into the next day, Roosevelt tries to resurrect a presidential campaign that's suddenly falling apart. He pleads his case to anyone who will listen. He works the telephones, calls in favors, and corners delegates in hotel corridors. But it isn't enough. Roosevelt remains 70 votes short, and victory for Taft is all but certain. Less than two days later, at 2am on June 20, Roosevelt gathers his supporters in the hotel ballroom. As the crowd roars, he launches into a furious denunciation of the Republican establishment. He accuses a corrupt party machine of stealing the nomination from him and urges his supporters to go into the coming convention votes and challenge the credentials of every Taft supporting delegate. Then, pounding on the lectern, Roosevelt delivers a barely veiled threat. If the party refuses to change direction, his supporters should abandon it. So after Roosevelt's last desperate roll of the dice does fail, his supporters walk out of the convention and regroup at the nearby Orchestra Hall. There, Roosevelt's voice echoes beneath its grand dome as he makes it official. He is done with with the Republicans and will now lead a new political party and run for president as his candidate. Six weeks later, Roosevelt returns to Chicago for the convention of the newly formed Progressive party. More than 2,000 supporters fill the Chicago Coliseum, the same venue that many of them walked out of less than two months before. And there, to thunderous applause, Roosevelt lays out a radical platform. It includes a crackdown on political corruption, backing for women's suffrage, stronger protections for workers, and a national public health service. Reporters push to the front of the crowd and ask Roosevelt how he feels about his chances. Roosevelt just grins under his thick mustache and tells him that he's feeling as strong as a bull moose. That quote is such a hit that the Progressive party soon acquires an unofficial nickname, the Bull Moose Party, which Roosevelt hopes will reshape politics in the United States and take him back to the white house.
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Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
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Narrator (History Daily Host - Lindsey Graham)
It's the evening of November 5, 1912, in Oyster Bay, New York, almost five months after the Republican National Convention. Inside his sprawling home, Theodore Roosevelt sits quietly by the fire, a cigar pinned between his teeth. Its smoke curls lazily upward past the stag heads and stretched cheetah skins that line the walls, souvenirs from Roosevelt's famous appetite for adventure. But Roosevelt has never taken On a challenge like this before running as a third party candidate in a two party system is a long shot. Publicly, Roosevelt has insisted that he can beat both President William Howard Taft and Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson. But deep down, he's always known that the numbers don't quite add up. And now, as election day draws to a close, that reality is sinking in for a man who instantly dominates every room he enters. Roosevelt is subdued. Family, friends, political allies and staff have gathered to await the results. Yet everyone follows Roosevelt's somber lead. The only noises come from a clock on the mantel and Roosevelt's finger tapping the arm of his leather chair. At around 11pm, a telephone breaks the silence. A staff member hurries from the room to answer it and comes back shortly with news. The early returns are in and they point to a landslide for Woodrow Wilson. Roosevelt sits in second. Taft is a distant third. It's an extraordinary performance for a newly formed party, but it's nowhere near enough. Without a word, Roosevelt rises from his chair. Family members ask if he's alright, but he only smiles and calmly heads to his library. There, at an oak writing desk beside the window, he drafts his concession statement. As he writes, the events of the last two years come into sharp focus. He was never really running against Taft or Wilson. His true opponents were the men who run the Republican Party. Men who would rather suffer defeat than lose control. And they'll get what they want. The Democrats will run the country for the next eight years before the Republicans regroup and regain power. And as for Roosevelt's progressive party, by then it will be long gone, having collapsed as a serious national force during the 1916 presidential campaign. So the two party system in the United States will survive and it will continue to dominate America's political landscape for the rest of the 20th century and beyond, despite Roosevelt's dramatic attempt to disrupt it at the Republican National Convention, which began on June 18, 1912. Next on History Daily. June 19, 1865. More than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation, enslaved people in Texas are officially informed of their freedom. From Nouser and Airship. This is History Daily. Hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by Mohammed Shazi Sound designed by Molly Bond Music by Thrum this episode is written and researched by Ned Carter Miles. Edited by Scott Reeves. Managing producer Emily Byrne. Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
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Safeway/Albertsons Advertiser
Save on family essentials at Safeway and Albertsons this week. Extra meaty pork back ribs bone in are $2.99 per pound limit 2 member price and Sweet Red cherries are $2.99 per pound Limit 6 lb member price with coupon plus signature select 80% lean ground beef sold in 3 pound twin pack bricks is $4.99 per pound limit 1 member price with coupon Fresh and delicious savings for every meal. Hurry in. This deal won't last. Visit safewayeralbertsons.com for more deals and ways to save.
This episode of History Daily takes listeners back to June 18, 1912, chronicling Theodore Roosevelt's dramatic break from the Republican Party after a bitter nomination fight with President William Howard Taft. The episode traces the events leading to Roosevelt’s decision to form the Progressive (“Bull Moose”) Party, disrupting America's political landscape and changing the course of the 1912 presidential election.
[04:46, 05:24]
"He wants to keep that promise, but he also believes that it's his duty to serve if his country needs him."
— Lindsey Graham, [07:24]
[12:16]
"Roosevelt condemned what he saw as steamroller tactics, silencing the voice of American voters, but complaining in the press wasn't going to help him."
— Lindsey Graham, [13:19]
[14:11–15:03]
"He is done with the Republicans and will now lead a new political party and run for president as its candidate."
— Lindsey Graham, [15:27]
[15:48]
"Roosevelt just grins under his thick mustache and tells them that he's feeling as strong as a bull moose."
— Lindsey Graham, [16:14]
[19:00]
"His true opponents were the men who run the Republican Party. Men who would rather suffer defeat than lose control."
— Lindsey Graham, [20:45]
| Timestamp | Segment/Topic | |-------------|----------------------------------------------------| | 00:40–02:41 | Roosevelt’s arrival in Chicago, Republican tension | | 05:24–10:05 | Flashback: Roosevelt in Italy weighing a return | | 12:16–16:49 | The RNC, party split, birth of the Progressive Party| | 19:00–22:23 | Election night, aftermath, reflection |
This episode offers a compelling account of how Theodore Roosevelt’s moral outrage and political ambition reshaped—and ultimately fractured—the Republican Party in 1912. Through vivid narrative and historical detail, History Daily underscores the enduring power of party control and the resilience of the American two-party system, even in the face of charismatic, reform-minded challengers.