The lives of Theodore Roosevelt and Winston Churchill overlapped, but they met in person only once — at a dinner in the Governor’s Mansion in Albany, New York on December 10, 1900. The 42-year old Roosevelt was about to relocate to Washington DC to assume his duties as Vice President. The 26-year old Churchill, who was visiting America to shore up his finances by a lecture tour, was about to take his seat in Parliament.
What happened at their dinner is unknown. But to the extent historians have noticed the dinner (which isn’t a large extent), they have accepted the view, first attributed to Roosevelt’s daughter Alice, that the two men did not get along because they were so much alike. As Robert Pilpel, in his Churchill in America 1895 – 1961, put it: “It was a case of likes repelling.”
But was it?
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