Alice Hathaway Lee was only 17 years old when she met Teddy Roosevelt in 1878. The future U.S. president was a student at Harvard University. Roosevelt was a classmate of Lee’s cousin and it was at their house they met.
As soon as Roosevelt met Alice, he wrote of her constantly in his diary. He was smitten with her. He found her beautiful and charming. He was so obsessed with Alice that he wrote of her all the time. He chronicled her acts of recognition of him, her quiet smiles, her silences — every action he saw her take, as though he never wanted to forget the slightest detail.
Eight months later, Roosevelt proposed marriage, but Alice was in no hurry. She made him wait eight more months before she agreed and the wedding was later that year.

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Friday nights still take me back to sidelines of high school football
With changed priorities, it’s time to re-evaluate my long-term goal
In the old Ginger or Mary Ann debate, I wanted a third choice
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
U.S. gives $529 million to build car with worse gas mileage than SUV
Banning access to guns won’t prevent the evil in human hearts
In the name of ‘fairness,’ everyone forced to pay for expensive chair lifts