By Mona Charen
On Oct. 16, 1901, President Theodore Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House. As Edmund Morris relates in âTheodore Rex,â many Americans were pleased with this precedent-shattering dinner. But not all. Definitely not all. In the South, disgust and vitriol shook the rafters. A sample of headlines: âRoosevelt Dines a Darkeyâ and âOur Coon-Flavored President.â
Sen. Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina said, âThe action of President Roosevelt in entertaining that nâ will necessitate our killing a thousand nâ in the South before they will learn their place again.â
In 1918, Will and Annie Johnson, young, Black sharecroppers in Marlboro County, South Carolina, would name their son Theodore Roosevelt Johnson to honor the 26th president. They could have chosen to honor Washington, but as their great-grandson Theodore R. Johnson writes in his new book âWhen the Stars Begin to Fall,â by choosing the presidentâs name, they were making a âbold proclamation about who could be truly American.â