1,051 Quotes by Theodore Roosevelt

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    It is necessary for the welfare of the nation that men's lives be based on the principles of the Bible. No man, educated or uneducated, can afford to be ignorant of the Bible.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    I believe that this Republic will endure for many centuries. If so there will doubtless be among its Presidents Protestants and Catholics, and very probably at some time, Jews. I have consistently tried while President to act in relation to my fellow Americans of Catholic faith as I hope that any future President who happens to be Catholic will act towards his fellow Americans of Protestant faith. Had I followed any other course I should have felt that I was unfit to represent the American people.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    If, in any individual, university training produces a taste for refined idleness, a distaste for sustained effort, a barren intellectual arrogance, or a sense of superfluous aloofness from the world of real men who do the world's real work, then it has harmed that individual.

  • Share


  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    No man needs sympathy because he has to work. Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    Those who oppose all reform will do well to remember that ruin in its worst form is inevitable if our national life brings us nothing better than swollen fortunes for the few and the triumph in both politics and business of a sordid and selfish materialism.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    After the war, and until the day of his death, his position on almost every public question was either mischievous or ridiculous, and usually both.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    I enter a most earnest plea that in our hurried and rather bustling life of today we do not lose the hold that our forefathers had on the Bible. I wish to see the Bible study as much a matter of course in the secular colleges as in the seminary. No educated man can afford to be ignorant of the Bible, and no uneducated man can afford to be ignorant of the Bible.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Theodore Roosevelt
  • Quote

    ... the Armenian massacre was the greatest crime of the war, and the failure to act against Turkey is to condone it ... the failure to deal radically with the Turkish horror means that all talk of guaranteeing the future peace of the world is mischievous nonsense.

  • Tags
  • Share