"4. TR Inaugural Site in 2009" by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
Theodore Roosevelt InauguralBrochure |
Official Brochure of Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site (NHS) in New York. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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The library of the Wilcox house
where Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th President of the
United States reflects the opulence that characterized most of
the residences on then-fashionable Delaware Avenue around
1900. It was an all-purpose room
used predominantly by Mrs. Wilcox. Roosevelt took the oath of
office standing in front of the bay
window on the south side of the
room wearing a frock coat lent
him by Ansley Wilcox. The coat
is now on display in the house.
President William McKinley was
shot twice by 28-year-old anarchist Leon Czolgosz on September 6, 1901, during a public
reception at the Pan-American
Exposition in Buffalo. Doctors
removed one of the bullets but
failed to find the second, contributing to the development of
the infection that killed him eight
days later. One of the last photographs of McKinley (left) shows
him at the reception shortly before the assassin struck.
Ansley Wilcox describes the
inauguration: "The Secretary of
War, Mr. Root, was head of the
cabinet.... He addressed the new
President, calling him Mr. VicePresident, and on behalf of the
Cabinet, requested him to take
the oath of office. President
Roosevelt answered simply, but
with great solemnity, 'Mr. Secretary, I will take the oath. And...I
wish to state that it shall be my
aim to continue...the policy of
President McKinley, for the peace
and prosperity of our beloved
country....'
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"Judge Hazel advanced and administered the oath to support
the Constitution and laws. It was
taken with an uplifted hand....
The whole ceremony was over
within half an hour after the cabinet had entered the house, and
the small company dispersed,
leaving only the six cabinet officers with the President, who at
once held an informal session in
the library."
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From 1884 to the 1930s, this house was the home of Ansley Wilcox
and his wife Mary Grace. When Wilcox, a distinguished Buffalo lawyer, married Mary Grace Rumsey on November 20, 1883, the bride's
father gave them the use of the house as a wedding present. The
couple took up residence there the next year. Because of Wilcox's
prominence as a pioneer in the development of social work and civil
service reform, important local and national figures were welcomed
to the house.
One event that occurred here was of national significance and transcends all others in importance. On September 14, 1901, in the library of the Wilcox home, Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th
President of the United States just hours after the death of President
William McKinley. McKinley had been shot and critically wounded by
an assassin in Buffalo on September 6th while attending a public
reception at the Pan American Exposition. Vice President Roosevelt,
who was on a speaking trip in Vermont when he learned of the tragedy, hurried to the city, where members of the Cabinet had begun to
assemble to carry on the affairs of government. After surgery, McKinley rallied and the doctors assured Roosevelt that the President's
chances for recovery were excellent. By September 10th McKinley's
condition was so much improved that Roosevelt decided to join his
wife and children for a planned outing in the Adirondack Mountains
as an assurance to the nation that the danger was passed. Before
leaving he gave a copy of his itinerary to his friend Ansley Wilcox, at
whose house he had been staying.
Roosevelt arrived in the Adirondacks on September 11th. Late in the
afternoon two days later, he was returning from a climb up nearby
Mount Marcy when he noticed a man approaching rapidly on the
trail. "There wasn't a thought in my mind but that the President
would live," Roosevelt later recalled, "and I was perfectly happy until
I saw the runner coming. I had had a bully tramp and was looking
forward to dinner with the interest only an appetite worked up in the
woods gives you. When I saw the runner I instinctively knew he had
bad news, the worst news in the world."
The man handed Roosevelt a telegram: "The President appears to
be dying, and members of the Cabinet in Buffalo think you should
lose no time in coming." McKinley's condition had worsened shortly
after the doctors confidently told everyone that "no serious symptoms have developed." When the surgeons sewed up the President's
wounds they did not allow for proper drainage, and a gangrenous
infection soon set in. His body, weakened from shock and the loss
of blood, could not fight it.
After some difficulty, Roosevelt found a wagon and driver to take
him to North Creek, about 35 miles away, where a special train was
waiting to carry him to Buffalo. They set out at a fast pace at about
10:30 p.m. "The roads were the ordinary wilderness roads and the
night was dark," Roosevelt wrote in his Autobiography. "But we
changed horses two or three times . . . and reached the station just
at dawn." As he prepared to board the train, he was told that President McKinley was dead.
Roosevelt arrived in Buffalo about 1:30 p.m. on September 14th and
drove immediately to the Wilcox house. Before taking the oath of
office, however, he paid his respects to Mrs. McKinley at the J. G.
Milburn house, seven blocks north on Delaware Avenue, where she
and President McKinley had been staying. When Roosevelt returned
to the Wilcox house, all the members of McKinley's Cabinet except
Secretary of State John Hay and Secretary of the Treasury Lyman
Gage, who were not in Buffalo, assembled in the library. The chairs
and other furnishings were still slipcovered because the Wilcox family had been away for the summer and, except for Roosevelt's brief
stay after McKinley was shot, the house had been closed. Secretary
of War Elihu Root suggested that the oath be taken at once;
Roosevelt agreed.
In his dash from the Adirondacks, the Vice President had not had
time to gather up any of his formal attire. From among those invited
to witness the ceremony, he managed to acquire a long frock coat,
gray trousers, a waistcoat, black four-in-hand tie, and a pair of black
patent leather shoes. Thus attired, at about 3:30 p.m. on Saturday,
September 14, 1901, standing before Judge John R. Hazel of the
U.S. District Court, Theodore Roosevelt took the oath of office and
became the 26th President of the United States.
Roosevelt assumed the
presidency at a time of great
social ferment and change.
During his administrationshe was elected President in
his own right in 1904—more
reform bills were passed
than in any other administration since the Civil War.
Energetic, positive, and extremely self-confident, possessing a firm understanding of power politics and the
role America could play in
the world, Roosevelt initiated epochal readjustments in
the relationships of government and industry, established a strong policy of
conservation, influenced the
construction of the Panama
Canal, which helped make
the United States a world
power, and engineered the
peace treaty ending the
Russo-Japanese War. (For
this last action he was
awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1906.) He saw himself as the "steward of the
people," his actions limited
only by law and constitutional restrictions. To the
people he was the "trust
buster" and the man with
the "big stick." "I did not
usurp power," he said, "but I
did greatly broaden the use
of executive power." Bringing new excitement and
strength to the office, Theodore Roosevelt was the first
of the modern Presidents.
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The Ansley Wilcox house (left) is
one of the oldest houses in Buffalo and one of five presidential
inaugural sites located outside
Washington, D.C. The others are
Federal Hall, New York City,
where George Washington became the nation's first President;
Congress Hall, Philadelphia, Pa.,
scene of Washington's second
inauguration and the inauguration of John Adams; the Coolidge house in Plymouth, Vt.,
where Calvin Coolidge was
sworn in after the death of Warren G. Harding; and Love Field,
Dallas, Tex., where Lyndon
Johnson took the presidential
oath on board Air Force One
after the assassination of John
F. Kennedy.
Ansley Wilcox, a prominent lawyer, was one of Buffalo's most
distinguished citizens. He was
also an active civic leader and a
pioneer in state and national
civil service reform. Wilcox was
45 years old in 1901. Far left:
Reporters and photographers
gather outside the Wilcox house
on September 14, 1901, when
Theodore Roosevelt was sworn
in as the 26th President of the
United States.
"The people of Buf-
tragedy occurred
which made him president, and it was here
that he was sworn
in.... It takes less in
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the way of ceremony
to make a president
in this country, than
it does to make a king
in England or any
monarchy, but the significance of the event
is no less great."
Ansley Wilcox, 1902
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The House and Its History
The land on which the Ansley Wilcox house stands was once part of
the grants of the Holland Land Company, a Dutch investment firm
having large land holdings in most of western New York State and in
northwestern Pennsylvania. Wilhelm Willink, a Holland Company
agent, is the first name to appear on the abstract title. On March 1,
1809, Willink conveyed title to Ebenezer Walden. In 1838 when the
"Patriot War" or Upper Canada Rebellion (1836-38) had strained relations between Canada and the United States, three companies of
U.S. Artillery were ordered to Buffalo to establish a garrison. Walden's land was leased for the purpose, and a post, Buffalo Barracks,
was erected on it. A row of officers quarters facing the parade
ground was a prominent part of the post. The front portion of the
Wilcox house was part of this row, and, until the abandonment of
the barracks, this two-family structure housed the commanding officer and the post surgeon.
Many officers who served at the Buffalo Barracks later attained distinction. Among the officers who lived in the Wilcox house were
Silas Casey, whose System of Infantry Tactics was adopted by the
U.S. Army in 1862, and post surgeon Dr. Robert Wood, son-in-law of
Zachary Taylor and father of the distinguished Confederate naval
officer, John Taylor Wood. Dr. Wood later became assistant surgeon
general of the United States. Other officers who served at Buffalo
Barracks, and who must have frequented the house, included John
C. Pemberton, Arnold Elzey, Samuel P. Heintzelman, Henry J. Hunt,
About Your Visit
John Sedgwick, and Jefferson Davis, all of whom would attain distinction during the Civil War. Millard Fillmore, prominent Buffalo resident and a future President of the United States, was also a frequent
participant in the social life of the post.
When Buffalo Barracks was abandoned in the late 1840s, the house
passed into private ownership. A prominent Buffalo judge, Joseph G.
Masten, was its first private owner, followed by a distinguished Buffalo lawyer, Albert P. Laning, and then by Frederick A. Bell. In 1883
Dexter P. Rumsey purchased the house and gave it to the Ansley
Wilcoxes for their lifetime use.
Previous owners had by this time built a frame addition at the rear of
the building and a brick coach house. By 1901 Wilcox had further
improved the property. A Buffalo architect, George Cary, rebuilt the
addition and remodeled the interior. The remodeling did not affect
the interior of the original part, except for the two first-floor parlors,
which were made into a large library. The house was transformed
into a stately mansion, flavored with both Greek Revival and Adamesque styles and seasoned with the eclecticism of the 19th century.
The Wilcoxes lived in the house until their deaths in the early 1930s.
After an attempt to raise funds to support the house as a memorial
failed, it was sold for use as a restaurant. In the 1960s, when the
house was in danger of being demolished, local citizens campaigned
to save the landmark and won, thanks largely to Liberty Bank, which
bought the house and held it until it was declared a national historic
site. Beginning in the autumn of 1970, the house was restored
through the cooperation of the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural Site
Foundation, Inc., the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society, the
Junior League, Erie County, the State of New York, and the National
Park Service. The site was dedicated and opened to the public on
September 14,1971, the 70th anniversary of the inauguration. The
dining room was opened in 1973. In 1981, the Victorian Lady's bedroom was opened. A special exhibit room highlights the events that
occurred between September 5,1901, when President McKinley
arrived in Buffalo to attend the Pan-American Exposition, and September 14, 1901, when Theodore Roosevelt was sworn in as the
26th President of the United States.
The entrance to the house is
on Delaware Ave., near
North St. A parking area to
the rear of the house can be
reached from Franklin St., a
one-way street leading north
from downtown Buffalo. The
house is open Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., and on Saturday
and Sunday from noon to 5
p.m. The house is closed on
the following holidays: January 1, Easter Sunday, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day,
Thanksgiving, and December 24, 25, and 31. The small
admission charge is waived
for organized school groups.
For Your Safety
Do not allow your visit to be
spoiled by an accident.
While every effort has been
made to provide for your
safety, there are still hazards
that require your attention
and vigilance. Exercise common sense and caution.
Information
Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site is
operated by the Theodore
Roosevelt Inaugural Site
Foundation on behalf of the
National Park Service. For
more information, write the
Superintendent, 641 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY
14202-1079; phone 716-8840095; or FAX: 716-884-0330;
or check our website at
www.nps.gov/thri on the Internet.
A GPO:2001^72-470/00462 Reprint 1999
Printed on recycled paper.