- National Duties - Wikisource, the free online library
We must ever face the fact of our shifting national needs, of the always-changing opportunities that present themselves But we may be certain of one thing: whether we wish it or not, we cannot avoid hereafter having duties to do in the face of other nations
- Theodore Roosevelt, Conservation as a National Duty, Speech Text . . .
The wise use of all of our natural resources, which are our national resources as well, is the great material question of today I have asked you to come together now because the enormous consumption of these resources, and the threat of imminent exhaustion of some of them, due to reckless and wasteful use, once more calls for common effort
- Conservation as a National Duty by President Theodore Roosevelt - CommonLit
As an explorer and naturalist, Theodore Roosevelt was a great supporter of environmental policies and protection In the following speech delivered on May 16th, 1908, President Roosevelt deems conservation a national responsibility
- Theodore Roosevelt, Conservation as a National Duty (May 13, 1908)
Read the text of Theodore Roosevelt, Conservation as a National Duty (May 13, 1908) online with commentaries and connections
- Theodore Roosevelt, Conservation as a National Duty, Textual . . .
Speech title as it is to be printed: “Conservation as a National Duty” Exact date and place of speech delivery: 13 May 1908 at the Conference of Governors of the United States of America, in the White House, Washington DC
- Theodore Roosevelt, “Conservation as a National Duty” (13 May 1908)
Theodore Roosevelt, “Address of President Roosevelt at the Laying of the Corner Stone of the Office Building of the House of Representatives, April 14 1906” (“The Man with the Muck-Rake”) (14 April 1906)
- The Duties of American Citizenship - Theodore Roosevelt 1883
Full text transcript of Theodore Roosevelt's The Duties of American Citizenship speech, delivered at Buffalo, NY - January 26, 1883
- Theodore Roosevelts Speech National Duties | ipl. org
Theodore Roosevelt’s speech “National Duties” calls for nationalism and unity, as it says that each individual must work hard and that individuals must work together
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