Learning details of lives of American presidents

KENT — Tim Kruger, a senior at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, was presented with a $500 check by Ken Cooper, president of the Kent Memorial Library, for winning the “My Favorite President� essay contest.

The award was presented before a lecture by author Douglas Brinkley at Town Hall on Sunday, May 31.

Cooper said the library sponsored the contest as a way of getting students involved in its lecture series, “The American Presidency,� which began in May.

“I have been told that this has been the largest non-sports sign-up in school history,� Cooper said.

“Tim wrote his winning essay on Theodore Roosevelt, and I know Teddy would have approved.�

In his essay, Kruger writes about some of the challenges Roosevelt faced in his lifetime.

“Teddy’s cowboy style, selfless service to his country and genuine concern for all Americans, not just the wealthy, made him one of the most popular presidents ever,� Kruger wrote. “His character can perhaps be best summed up with the story of how he still delivered a speech in 1912 after being shot in the rib cage, saying, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, I don’t know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot; but it takes more than that to kill a Bull Moose.’�

Writer, author and presidential biographer Douglas Brinkley then took the podium and and shared anecdotes about the 44 U.S. presidents.

Brinkley is the editor of “The Reagan Diaries� and co-author of “The Rise to Globalism� and “Witness to History.�

“Every president loves Abraham Lincoln,� he said. “Because no matter how bad the president has it, Lincoln had it worse.�

He also said that, “A basic surefire way for a president to build a legacy is to tell the truth to the American people. A way us presidential historians can tell when presidents are telling the truth is by seeing who wants to have their papers released quickly when they leave the White House.�

The next lecture in the series will be held on Sunday, June 28, at 2 p.m. at Town Hall with Chief White House Photographer Pete Souza. For more information, call the library at 860-927-3761.

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