
#OnThisDay in 1907, President Roosevelt spoke at the opening of the Jamestown Exposition, commemorating the 300th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, Virginia Colony, the first permanent English settlement in the Americas. It was also an attempt by Southern boosters to alter stereotypes of a backwards and struggling South, and to recenter colonial history away from New England.
"This great Republic of ours shall never become the government of a plutocracy, and it shall never become the government of a mob. God willing, it shall remain what our fathers who founded it meant it to be—a government in which each man stands on his worth as a man, where each is given the largest personal liberty consistent with securing the well-being of the whole, and where, so far as in us lies, we strive continually to secure for each man such equality of opportunity that in the strife of life he may have a fair chance to show the stuff that is in him," Roosevelt said at the event.
Read the full address as published in Roosevelt's state papers: ow.ly/GNjv50YKEGv

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