Theodore Roosevelt was born into privilege but also into frailty. Severe asthma kept him bedridden for much of his childhood. Doctors told his parents he might not survive to adulthood. He could have accepted his limitations and lived a quiet, protected life.
Instead, he declared war on his own weakness. He lifted weights, boxed, hiked, swam—anything to build the body that would match his mind. By his twenties, the sickly boy had become a force of nature who would charge up San Juan Hill.
"Do what you can, with what you have, where you are," Roosevelt said. At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we face our challenges the same way—not with excuses but with effort. Serving {CITY} means pushing through obstacles, not around them.
America's 250th celebrates those who transform limitations into strengths.
#USA250 #Transformation #Perseverance #{CITY}
Instead, he declared war on his own weakness. He lifted weights, boxed, hiked, swam—anything to build the body that would match his mind. By his twenties, the sickly boy had become a force of nature who would charge up San Juan Hill.
"Do what you can, with what you have, where you are," Roosevelt said. At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we face our challenges the same way—not with excuses but with effort. Serving {CITY} means pushing through obstacles, not around them.
America's 250th celebrates those who transform limitations into strengths.
#USA250 #Transformation #Perseverance #{CITY}
Historical Event
Theodore Roosevelt Born, July 27, 1858
Story Angle
The Perseverer - Transforming Limitations