"The King replied, 'It was caused by your good fate
and my bad fate. It was the fault of the Greek gods, who with their arrogance,
encouraged me to march onto your lands. Nobody is mad enough to choose war
whilst there is peace. During times of peace, the sons bury their fathers, but
in war it is the fathers who send their sons to the grave.’”— Herodotus
(484 B.C.-425 B.C.), The Histories, translated by A. D.
Godley (1931)
I could have used a visual representation
of the ancient Greek historian Herodotus with this quote, but I can think of few images more illustrative of the thousands of individual tragedies remembered on this day—than this photo of Theodore Roosevelt and his youngest son Quentin.
Several years out of the White House, TR had pressed hard for
“preparedness” in the event that America intervened in World War I on the side
of Britain and France. With his hated victor in the 1912 Presidential election,
Woodrow Wilson, firmly barring the door to his own leadership of a unit to
fight overseas, Roosevelt looked to his sons to vindicate the family honor.
All of them distinguished themselves in the
conflict, but the youngest, Quentin, only 18, was the one
that TR privately
believed might be “soft.” Perhaps to overcome that perception, Quentin, who
could easily have gotten out of serving because of inadequate vision, memorized
the eyechart in preparation for his physical exam. He then entered an entirely
new arm of the military—the Army Air Corps—and became a daredevil pilot.
On Bastille Day 1918, Lt. Quentin Roosevelt, in a dogfight in which he saved the lives of the other men in his unit, was shot down
in France by a German squadron led by Hermann Goering (later, the head of Germany's Luftwaffe in WWII). In the months after his son’s death, TR took long woods in the woods near his home, only
to emerge puffy-eyed from weeping. Most observers agreed that some spark went out
of the old political and military warrior after Quentin’s death. His own
passing came no more than six months later.
I related more details about the tale of this terrible price exacted by
war on this particular prominent American family in this prior post.
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