40.8682° N, 73.5301° W
Sagamore Hill. Roosevelt's permanent home estate, where he received, read, and archived incoming campaign correspondence (such as the Hamblen, Anthony, and App letters) and compiled his private 1909 diary files.
42.3770° N, 71.1167° W
Harvard College Library (Houghton Library). The repository of the Theodore Roosevelt Collection (MS Am 1454.55 (15)), where Theirloom's visual pipeline scanned the 1909 Excelsior Diary pages—extracting the title borders (page 5) and wildlife sketches (pages 24 & 27).
41.8781° N, 87.6298° W
The home of 11-year-old Ruth Hamblen, who wrote on lined notebook paper on November 6, 1912, immediately following the election, declaring herself "just as strong a progressive as anybody else" despite Woodrow Wilson's victory.
40.8068° N, 74.1854° W
The home of 8-year-old Athelone Anthony, who wrote on December 5, 1912, detailing how she cried over the election and tried to convince her "old Republican" Grandpa to vote for the Colonel.
42.0372° N, 88.2811° W
The school desk of Kathryn App, who penned a formal, fine-nibbed retrospective letter on November 7, 1914, noting that if boys and girls could vote, Roosevelt's victory would have been assured in Elgin.