Note: I
am still researching and working on an epic post saluting the recently departed
Maureen O’Hara, so I am resurrecting one of those memoir posts of my Cheyenne
boyhood to fill the space today. And
this one may help explain some of my oddness.
Some things never change.
Brilliant. Bombastic. Explosively energetic. Arrogant. Innovative. Egomaniacal. Heroic. Perpetually
manic. Self-inventing. Those are
some of the words and phrases the immediately spring to mind when contemplating
the life of Theodore Roosevelt, the
man who, among other things, reinvented
the Presidency for the 20th Century. The man who was born into a wealthy and
influential old Knickerbocker Dutch family
on October 27, 1858 continues to fascinate 96 years after his death in 1919 at
the age of 60.
In recent years he was the subject
of widely hailed three volume biography by Edmund Morris and several
other books examining various parts of his multi-faceted
life, studied in Doris Kearns
Goodwin’s close examination of the Progressive
era in The Bully Pulpit, portrayed by Tom Berenger in the TV
miniseries Rough Riders, and last
year was one of the three main characters profiled in Ken Burns’ epic 5 night PBS
documentary series The Roosevelts.
But 40 years after Roosevelt’s
death, he also grabbed the idolizing
attention of a 10 year old nerd from
Cheyenne, Wyoming. I was already in the grips of fascination with history as a bespectacled, bookish kid with no friends when I first encountered passing notice of him in my entirely
inadequate elementary school social
studies text. From there I checked
him out in the illustrated Presidential
biography books that I had already collected. And my folks
had taken me to the Black Hills where
I had seen Roosevelt’s visage squeezed in between Jefferson and Lincoln on
Mount Rushmore. So I knew he was a big deal.
My inspiration. |
But what turned Roosevelt from a passing interest into an obsession was a Classics Illustrated comic
book The Roughrider. The
comic told the story of how young Theodore, the weakling asthmatic who
was bullied and mocked for his myopia and
thick glasses but who by dint of
sheer grit and determination
transformed himself into a Harvard boxer,
South Dakota rancher, New York City Police Commissioner, war hero, and eventually
President. A particularly satisfying panel in the book depicted
Roosevelt knocking out with one
mighty blow a cowboy who mocked him
as four eyes. The boy Teddy reminded me a lot of me,
likewise the brunt of ridicule and abuse.
The adult hero held out
promise that it did not always have to be that way.
It was a short step from hero worship to nutty obsession. How
so? Let me count the ways.
The first thing was appearance. The mustache stubbornly refused to
rise on from the fine blonde down on
my upper lip. Halloween
costume fakes were all jet black, lacked the distinctive inward curl around the sides of the mouth, and, well, looked like crap. And I discovered that pince-nez glasses were not available at
my local optician’s. I was stuck with the clunky plastic faux
tortoise shell frames fit for a middle aged accountant. But I could get
the hat right.
I started with a cheap gray felt hat I bought at a souvenir stand at Cheyenne Frontier Days. It
was supposed to be a Confederate hat
and had a paper Stars and Bars Flag sticker
on the front. I was a loyal Union man and spent hours trying to get
all vestiges of that peeled off. The hat
did have a satisfyingly military looking
gold cord band with end
tassels. I pinned up one side with a brass US collar insignia from my Dad’s
World War II uniform. It made a
satisfying reproduction of Col. Roosevelt’s famous Rough Rider campaign hat.
At first I decorated it with a long pheasant tail feather, but discarded
that when I realized that no photo showed my beloved Teddy sporting such a plume. I wore that increasingly battered hat every
single day from the moment I got out of bed to the time I turned in at
night—except when required to remove it at school
or church—for almost three years
until it practically disintegrated and my head got too big. Needless to say, I attracted a lot of gaping stares. And the bullies were unimpressed by its martial appearance.
The hat was useful in the back yard fantasy games I played largely by
myself. None of the other neighborhood kids, least of all twin brother Tim who was running with a
faster older crowd and already smoking cigarettes in their fort/club house, were interested in
daily charges up San Juan Hill or whatever other
adventures I could conjure. My red and
white Firestone coaster brake bicycle with
the plastic streamers on the hand grips had to be my noble steed.
Alas, there are no extant photos of me in my Rough Rider
hat, although I know that several were snapped on our old Kodak Brownie Box Camera. My
mom, likely out of shame and embarrassment, left them out of her meticulously maintained photo albums and they can’t even be
located in the unsorted shoe boxes
of old photos.
School was a place where my obsession
played out with a bit of drama. I started handing in my homework, busy work Ditto
activity sheets, quizzes, and tests with the correct day of the month underneath my name but
instead of 1959 listing the year as 1905, the year after Roosevelt’s election to a full term on his own.
What an idyllic vision of American life in the era of Teddy Roosevelt was represented in the old movies that I adored like Meet Me in St. Louis. |
I picked the year because the old movies I watched on TV when I got
home from school painted that era as
sunny, pleasant, and free from looming
nuclear annihilation—something that
was constantly on our minds in Cheyenne where
the Air Force was beginning to build
the nation’s first ICBM missile base
and which, the civic boast proclaimed, would be a top target for Commie obliteration. The movies, mostly musicals and comedies like
Meet
Me in St. Louis or Life With Father were all made in
the ‘30’ and ‘40’s when many ticket
buyers were of an age to recall those days with wistful nostalgia. Most depicted the comfortable middle class in large
homes with live-in servants. It seemed to me that Teddy Roosevelt
ruled over an ideal time to be alive.
So I decided that, come hell or high water, I would live
then. Neither my teachers, nor the Principal at
Eastridge Elementary where I was
routinely sent for an attitude
adjustment, were amused by this
quirk. They demanded that I use the correct date and used every punishment in their arsenal to compel
my acquiescence. For a while I was given an F (actually a 5 because Cheyenne Public
Schools were then using an odd
numerical grading system) on
every paper I turned in with the wrong year.
But I was a student reading at
the level of a senior in high School and in subjects like social studies and science showed every evidence of complete mastery of the lessons.
Of course my spelling was
atrocious, my hand writing cramped
and nearly illegible, and I was too bored
by arithmetic to bother with accurate computations and, it would be discovered much later, was mildly dyslexic compounding that
problem. Despite my wildly uneven academic performance, eventually it was decided that
it was hopeless the hold the date thing against my grades. Besides, if the teachers kept it up, I would
be held back for another year and they would be stuck with me again.
So they tried keeping me in for recess. Hardly a punishment as it kept me from
getting beat up on the playground and
while the others were running around and screaming, I was happily alone in the
class room partaking of my favorite
activity—reading. Keeping me after school was no skin off my nose either. Things were not all that rosy at home where my Mom was battling mental health and rage issues and I was the number 1 object of her wrath and dissatisfaction with the hand life had
dealt her. Of course that also meant
that when the school sent home notes complaining about my stubborn misdating,
she took it as purposeful disgrace to
the family—the gravest of all
possible offenses. Then out would
come the wire handle of the fly swatter, down would drop my jeans and underwear and my ass got
whipped to hamburger.
None of it mattered. I just kept entering that date, and dreaming
of the time and place where nothing like that happened.
The whole thing lasted almost three
years until I entered Junior High School
and just let it all slide for new dreams and obsessions, every bit as weird
perhaps, but not as apt to draw notice.
Then in a few more years I would
discover the underside of 1905 and
the Roosevelt utopia—the world of vicious capitalist exploitation of working
people, their resistance and rebellion, of open class war, Jim Crow, lynchings,
and of nasty little imperialist war.
But that’s another story….
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