by John S. D. Eisenhower
Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri, 2014. Pp. xiv, 192.
Illus., maps, append., notes., biblio., index. $40.00. ISBN: 0826220002
Two Men Who Helped Shape America’s Rise as a Great Power
In this book, the late John
Eisenhower look
s
at the long friendship between two men, one still an iconic figure and the other largely forgotten save by historians, who played important roles in shaping America’s rise as a world power from the 1890s through the Great War.
This is
not primarily
a
biographical
work
,
though Eisenhower
does give the reader a good look at the backgrounds and lives of both men, each in his own way a surprisingly unique person.
The pair hit it off on their
first meeting, in 1897
. Within months they had organized and led
the “Rough Riders” in Cuba, which brought both national fame, and
their
lives and careers were intertwined
thereafter
.
Eisenhower
does a good job of covering
the
often complex
interactions between the two, showing how they helped shape American military institutions and policies
. This war particularly so
during Roosevelt’s White House years
(1901-1909)
and later when Wood was Army Chief of Staff
(1910-1914).
Eisenhower
is particularly good about the role the two men played in preparing
America
for World War I, in which they both sought but were denied front line service.
He
seems
, however,
not to have known about Roosevelt’s years in the New York National Guard, an obscure episode in the man’s career, and he might
profitably
have expanded his
very brief
account of Roosevelt’s and Wood’s proposed “Rough Rider” division for World War I. But these
two points
are relatively minor within the
otherwise
excellent
portrait
he paints of this important friendship.
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