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Booker T.
Washington c. 1900. Library of Congress
Theodore
Roosevelt became president after the assassination of
President William McKinley in 1901. The early months of
his administration were a tense period of trial and error
as Roosevelt had not been elected president. Fond of dinners
as a means of entertaining, the Roosevelts held them nearly
every night over the last few months of 1901 and constructed
the guest lists with an eye to politics. One of these
early dinners put White House hospitality on the front
pages. This dinner actually occurred a few days before
the official period of mourning for McKinley had ended.
On October 16, Roosevelt had among his guests the educator
Booker T. Washington, whose autobiography, Up From
Slavery, was then highly popular. Roosevelt often
invited people to dinner to discuss public affairs when
the days meeting calendar was too full. Washington
arrived with an invitation at the north door promptly
at eight. In the Blue Room he joined his fellow dinner
guest, Philip B. Stewart of Colorado. Dinner was probably
served in the State Dining Room since the party was in
evening dress. The guests remembered a simple, cordial
evening. The next morning following a news release of
the White House guest list, the event sparked the hottest
news since the McKinley assassination. Editorials in the
Southbut not only the Southwere harsh in their
criticism of Roosevelt. The furor over the dinnerthe
first time that an African American was entertained at
the White Houserevealed the structures symbolic
power and the bigotry then at large in the nation. Click
here to learn more
Read more:
William Seale, The Presidents House, White
House Historical Association, 1986; Henry Chase, "Memorable
Visitors: Classic White House Encounters," American
Visions, February-March, 1995, 26-33.
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