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The Rough Riders (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading) Paperback – March 18, 2004
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBarnes & Noble
- Publication dateMarch 18, 2004
- Dimensions5.75 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches
- ISBN-100760755760
- ISBN-13978-1414504926
- Lexile measure1290L
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- ASIN : 1414504926
- Publisher : Barnes & Noble (March 18, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0760755760
- ISBN-13 : 978-1414504926
- Lexile measure : 1290L
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Theodore Roosevelt (/ˈroʊzəvɛlt/ ROH-zə-velt;[a] October 27, 1858 – January 6, 1919) was an American statesman, author, explorer, soldier, naturalist, and reformer who served as the 26th President of the United States from 1901 to 1909. As a leader of the Republican Party during this time, he became a driving force for the Progressive Era in the United States in the early 20th century.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Pach Brothers [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

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Roosevelt, later president of the US, was at the time, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy. He was offered the position of colonel of the Rough Riders, but suggested that his friend Leonard Wood, who had past military experience, be given the job. Wood later became a general and is remembered today by having an army fort named for him. Roosevelt was the lieutenant colonel and later colonel when Wood was promoted. Roosevelt tells how he trained the Rough Riders, many of whom were accustomed to fighting in the wild west, to fight as a unified team. They trained in San Antonio, the home of the famed Alamo.
He tells of the confusions and lack of communications as only half of his unit was able to sail to Cuba. He states that it took six days to cruise from Florida to Cuba. He describes the problems of insufficient boats and of getting his men ashore. He speaks of the courage of his men, how they endured near starvation, and how they acted with dignity. He describes the confusions of the battles, the inability to tell enemy from friend. He tells of the heroism of the black unit, a unit that was segregated from whites, but performed at least as well.
He speaks about the most famous of the ten-day battles, the battle of San Juan Hill. There were 6,600 Americans against 4,500 Spanish. The Americans killed or wounded totaled 1,071. Roosevelt became famous for leading the charge up this hill. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Many of the Americans became sick in the Cuban climate. The US government didn't bring their soldiers home after the war until Roosevelt and others sent strong objections. Many soldiers returned finding no job. This book was written over a century ago, but it is important history and should be read.
That aside the book is a good read and an excellent historical account of what Roosevelt and his regiment went through, before, during, and after Cuba. There is a lot of information there but you have to sift through the writing style to get it. He explains the disorder he encountered in embarking in Florida and disembarking in Cuba. There is a ton of information on the mismanagement of the campaign both in command and control and in supporting logistics.
When he writes about the men being wounded and not crying out, he is writing in the style of the time. BBC History did a comparative report on the way authors portrayed soldiers being injured over the last one hundred years and Roosevelt's style fits the time. Men were brave and tough then and no author would contradict that view point. Soldiers screaming on the battlefield did get written about until the Vietnam war. The same view point went to men themselves. Unless you were the worst thing on the Earth, an author would say that you were amongst the best of men. It's just the style of the time.
I could go on but I won't. I will say that the appendices at the back of the book weren't necessary and were in some ways a rehash of what he had written in the main part of the book. Still it was a good read and I recommend it.
This books makes no bones about the man's views, this isn't someone distancing himself from his actions, but putting forth his view on the events in an unflinching way. Having read many historical accounts of the events in the book, I am surprised by how accurate most of them are. One would consider a man as gregarious and self-aggrandizing as Roosevelt to have tried to radically embellish his own actions; but for the most part they were not. The parts which seem to be embellished are the depictions of the men themselves, all great and good men of few flash and unimpeachable character. While I'm sure the men were probably competent soldiers and fighters; I'm pretty sure that they also had the vices which go along with such men. Such things can be overlooked as Roosevelt's own hyperbole without distracting from the work as a whole.
Overall the book is engrossing, entertaining and a great look into the mind of what must have been an exceedingly interesting person.
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Throughout the book, Roosevelt expresses great pride in 'his' men. Originally second in command, he took over from Leonard Wood and led the men through various skirmishes to the battles in the San Juan hills and after to the siege of Santiago. He had no prior military experience and was quick to criticise the defence department's unpreparedness for war. Old supplies, outdated supplies, worn out supplies, no supplies; at least part of the thrust of this memoir is directed at telling government departments to get their acts together and at the same time telling the public about their government's shortcomings, to make sure it would be a future election issue.
That's the politician shining through. Despite being a cavalry regiment of men selected for their horsemanship, the Rough Riders served throughout the campaign as infantry, as logistics failed to get their horses to them and in any event, when you want to go mixing it with the enemy toe to toe, a horse just gets in the way and might steal your lunch as well. Roosevelt tries very hard to acknowledge all his men in print. I think he reports every casualty by name and comments very positively about his troops at every page, although his constant references to colour - there were native Americans serving in the Rough Riders and they served alongside coloured regiments (all getting mixed together in the fighting) - date the book. The Americans had segregated coloured units until 1945 and Roosevelt reflects the racial stereotype 'concerns' as to how such men would perform in battle, until he saw for himself that they were at least equal to any similarly trained personnel. That doubts persisted despite the track record of the 54th Massachusetts and other 'coloured' regiments in the Civil War and would continue through WW2 is intriguing, but the answers aren't in this book.
So having honoured as many men by name as possible (which is one way of selling books), Roosevelt, twenty pounds lighter, went on the be elected governor of New York and was later selected at President McKinley's running mate on the republican ticket for the 1900 election. McKinley was assassinated in 1901, by which twist of fate, Teddy Roosevelt became the youngest ever president of the United States. Returning to this book, he was a good writer; clear, precise and entertaining. His obsession with naming everyone does get tiring for those of use who did not know any of them, but we can understand why he did it.
As a character, Theodore Roosevelt is probably the most recognised president in history, if only from his being portrayed in the movies: The late, great Robin Williams played him in the 'night at the museum' franchise, Tom Berenger in 'Rough Riders' (1997) and he was parodied by John Alexander in 'arsenic and old lace', (1944) charging up the stairs pretending they are San Juan Hill. Roosevelt didn't charge up San Juan Hill, according to his book; he charged up and captured what became known as Kettle Hill. He then started to charge San Juan Hill only to find nobody heard the order, so he had to go back for them (brilliantly captured by Tom Berenger in the 1997 movie) and then by the time they'd got sorted, the hill had been taken anyway.
So with all the portrayals and parodies, it's nice to read what the man himself had to say. He said it in great haste, it's one of those books that gets dashed off to capitalise on the events; but for all that, a good read, in context.
Roosevelt was very much typical of the political class of the day - primarily a strong outdoors type, with a background in huntin', shootin', fishin', very different from the more modern political animals that seek high office. But it's worth noting that when writing the book, Roosevelt probably had an eye on his political aspirations - the number of people that he names is quite surprising - clearly he was hoping for their votes!.
The actual details of the fighting are also quite fascinating - we see the begining of a modern style of conflict, compared to the more open fields of battle that would have been common just 50 years before. It has some interesting details, and some rather jingoistic langauge that many Americans would deride, if they were to read it in the books of other nations.
Although not of primary interest to other nationalities, it's worth reading just to see how things have changed over the last century.
An overall enjoyable, if brief read (albeit with slightly too many lists of people), this book provides a fascinating insight into one of America’s first volunteer cavalry units which saw action in Cuba during the Spanish-American War at the end of the nineteenth century, with the pre-Presidential author as second in command.





