
Hermann Hagedorn (1882–1964)
Author of The Roosevelt Family of Sagamore Hill.
About the Author
Works by Hermann Hagedorn
Poems and Ballads 2 copies
Faces in the Dawn 2 copies
The life of Theodore Roosevelt 2 copies
The Rough Riders : a romance 2 copies
Roosevelt Prophet of Unity 1 copy
Book of Courage, The 1 copy
Roosevelt, prophet of unity 1 copy
The Rough Riders 1 copy
While There is Time 1 copy
Associated Works
The Works of Theodore Roosevelt - Nat'l. Edition / Homeward Bound Edition (1926) — Editor, some editions — 8 copies
The Roosevelt Family of Sagamore Hill - No Time for Sergeants - R. S. V. P. - The Last Hunt — Contributor — 2 copies
Reader's Digest Great Biographies in Large Type: Schweitzer / Cassatt — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1882
- Date of death
- 1964
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- American Academy of Arts and Letters (Literature, 1920)
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Even though I had heard of Albert Schweitzer, I really could not have said what his claim to fame was. I vaguely remember reading he had won the Nobel Peace Prize, though didn't know why. Wow! What an inspiring guy! He lived entire life selflessly to serve others and always pushed himself to become better in some way. For instance, he had earned both a doctorate in philosphy and theology by his early 20's, and quite well known throughout his 20's for preaching and his already being one of show more the world's leading virtuoso on the organ, but still felt unsatisfied and unfulfilled. He had already determined that by the time he was 30 (for that was the age Jesus was when his ministry began), he would know his destiny. When he was 30, he read an article in a missionary publication about the desparate life some in Africa were forced to live with not a doctor for hundreds of miles, so he decided that he would become a doctor. At that time in history, a person just did not change careers, and people that he was crazy. He gave himself 9 yrs. to become a doctor, and did indeed becoming an expert in tropical medicine. He then went to Gabon, West Africa to begin his practice to the native population living there in the jungle. His determination was remarkable. Without much funding and desparate for an hospital, he ended up turning a chicken coop into one. He not only had to practice medicine and surgery for long hours of the day, but also built himself any structures needed and had to grow all the food he and his wife, staff and patients would need, and was the spiritual teacher on Sundays. His energy for 50 years boundless, getting only 4 hrs. sleep a night for most of that time. I found him to be such an inspiration for his drive and vision, as well as for his love for humanity and reverence for life. show less
This book is so relavant to todays world even though it is history. Very interesting and shows many points of views and reasons for those views. It explains alot and makes you proud to be an American and ready to stand for what you believe in while loving those who do not agree.
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 46
- Also by
- 7
- Members
- 505
- Popularity
- #49,062
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 19
- Favorited
- 1













