From the End of the Earth to the Oval Office
For TR, the nation s highest office was never a burden; he loved the job, and Americans loved him for loving it
One summer brought excitement and glory to the young secretary of a political leader. How could he know that the next one would brim with tragedy?
To what extent did greatness inhere in the man, and to what degree was it a product of the situation?
In San Francisco Warren G. Harding lay dead, and the nation was without a Chief Executive. In the early morning hours, by the light of a flickering oil lamp, an elderly Vermonter swore in his son as the thirtieth President of the United States
Martin Van Buren, Andrew Jackson’s right-hand man, was a master of political intrigue who let nothing block his one unwavering ambition—the Presidency. But sometimes he was too smart for his own good
The great tragedy of the twenty-eighth President as witnessed by his loyal lieutenant, the thirty-first.