Scott #830 Most used US postage stamps are worth 20 cents, the minimum amount required to catalog and stock the stamps. Unused will always be worth at least their face value. This one is hard to find in Mint condition and has a catalog value worth $3.50. There is a minor variety that is worth more $15. Consult a postage stamp catalog, usually available at your local library for exact identification and catalog values.
About .25 used, as much as $25 in mint condition.
Theodore Roosevelt used this term to describe his program.
Scott Number 1236 pictures Eleanor Roosevelt. This 5c stamp was issued in 1963. It has a minimal value used and can be purchased for 40 cents in mint condition.
There is no 1881 Roosevelt stamp. The earliest stamp issued with a Roosevelt, Teddy, was in 1922. Scott number 557 is worth 45 cents catalog used and about $30 in mint condition.
Scott Number 929 pictures the flag raising at Iwo Jima Roosevelt. This 3c stamp was issued in 1945. It has a minimal value used and can be purchased for 70 cents in mint condition.
Theodore Roosevelt was the president who called the office of President (the position, that is, not the Oval Office room specifically) of President a "bully pulpit". Lots of Presidents have "used it effectively" (Lincoln, FDR, and JFK definitely used their Presidencies to promote their own ideals, for example), but it was Theodore Roosevelt who came up with the term.
a world class naval force
President Theodore (Teddy) Roosevelt is said to have used it first, in 1906. He got it from a mention in the book "Pilgrim's Progress" by John Bunyan, referring to a "man with a muck-rake." Roosevelt adapted the phrase to refer to how investigative journalists dig around in the muck to get to the truth.
police the western hemisphere.
The D stamp has a face value of 22 cents and can be used on domestic mail at that value.
This stamp was issued in 1988 and the value is 25 cents. It can be used only for domestic mail.
Roosevelt argued that northern securities used unfair business pratices in violation of the sherman act