Three days after the death of Theodore Roosevelt in January 1919, the  Roosevelt Permanent Memorial National Committee came into being. The  founders called for a week of special events throughout the U.S.  culminating on October 27, which would have been Roosevelt’s 61st  birthday. The response was inspiring, and set the new Association on a  long path of service to Roosevelt’s ideals and memory.
Renamed the Roosevelt Memorial Association (RMA), the organization on  May 31, 1920 was formally incorporated as a non-stock non-profit  corporation by an Act of Congress [41. Stat.691, 1920]. Congress charged  the RMA “to perpetuate the memory of Theodore Roosevelt for the benefit  of the people of the United States and the world.” Specifically,  Congress gave the RMA the objectives of establishing a memorial in  Washington, DC; creating a park at Oyster Bay, NY; and establishing and  maintaining “an endowment fund to promote the development and  application of the policies and ideals of Theodore Roosevelt for the  benefit of the American people."
More than a year before, the Women’s Theodore Roosevelt Memorial  Association had been incorporated under the membership corporations law  of the state of New York, “to commemorate the life of Theodore Roosevelt  by establishing and maintaining a permanent memorial in the City of New  York.” That permanent memorial was, and is, the Theodore Roosevelt  Birthplace, 28 East 20th Street in Manhattan: the reconstructed  brownstone house where Roosevelt was born in 1858, which opened to the  public on his birthday, October 27, 1923.
The RMA in 1923 opened a research library in New York City, and in  1943 presented the library’s sizable holdings—which included 12,000  books and pamphlets, 10,000 photographs, and thousands of letters,  manuscripts, and other items—to Harvard University, Roosevelt’s alma  mater. This became the Theodore Roosevelt Collection, now housed in  Harvard's Houghton and Widener libraries.
In 1928, the RMA completed Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park, and in  1942 gifted it to the town of Oyster Bay, New York, Roosevelt’s home for  more than three decades. On May 21, 1953 the RMA officially changed its  name to the Theodore Roosevelt Association (TRA) by amendment approved  by Congress (67 Stat.27-28, 1953), and less than one month later—on June  14, 1953—the TRA opened Roosevelt’s Oyster Bay home, Sagamore Hill, to  the public. Three years after that—on January 6, 1955—the TRA and the  Women's Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Association signed an agreement for  consolidation. On March 29, 1956, Congress approved an amendment (70  Stat.60, 1956) to the TRA's charter giving "the power at any time to  consolidate with the Women's Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Association."  The New York State Commissioner of Education on April 30, 1956 gave  consent for this consolidation, and days later, on May 3, 1956, the New  York State Supreme Court approved the merger, forming the present TRA.
In 1962, Congress passed Public Law 87-547 establishing both Theodore  Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site in New York City and  Sagamore Hill National Historic Site in Oyster Bay. The legislation  authorized the National Park Service to accept both the Birthplace and  Sagamore Hill as gifts from the TRA along with a $500,000 endowment to  support the management and operation of the properties. The TRA also  donated to the National Park Service Theodore Roosevelt Island in  Washington, DC, which was dedicated on October 27, 1967. In addition,  the TRA in 1960 established the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Fund at the  American Museum of Natural History, providing research grants in  conservation and natural history; and donated to the Library of Congress  the Theodore Roosevelt Association Motion Picture Collection with more  than 140,000 feet of film.
In 1975, the TRA launched the Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal,  a quarterly publication that highlights new scholarship about  Roosevelt’s legacy, life and times, and in the 1980s began sponsoring  Theodore Roosevelt Police Awards, which honor law enforcement officers  who have experienced serious illness or injury yet continued to render  outstanding service. The first award was given in 1983 in New York City  to mark the 125th anniversary of TR’s birth, and since then have been  bestowed in numerous other cities. The 1980s also marked the start of  our Teddy Bears for Kids program, which has given more than 80,000 bears  to hospitalized children nationwide to help them smile and feel safe in  an unfamiliar and even frightening healthcare environment. In the  1990s, the TRA launched Theodore Roosevelt Public Speaking contests in  which high school students present five-minute oratory about aspects of  Roosevelt’s life and legacy, and like the Police Awards, these  competitions are held in several locations.
During 1975-77, the TRA sponsored and paid for the East 20th Street  Revitalization Project to improve the block in Manhattan where the  Roosevelt Birthplace is located. Buildings were cleaned and painted,  trees planted, and a new brick walk laid in front of the historic house.  More recently, the TRA contributed some $15,000 to the Theodore  Roosevelt Bird Sanctuary in Oyster Bay. The TRA also has supported  Youngs Memorial Cemetery in Oyster Bay—site of Roosevelt’s grave—and  over the years has contributed $100,000 to Harvard University to pay for  improved facilities to house the Theodore Roosevelt Collection. More  recently, the TRA was instrumental in purchasing and stabilizing the  cabin known as Pine Knot, TR's presidential retreat in Albemarle County,  Virginia, just outside Charlottesville, and for seeing that the  non-profit Edith and Theodore Roosevelt Pine Knot Foundation had the  leadership and resources to take over ownership and management of this  unique property.
Since its earliest days, the TRA has awarded the Theodore Roosevelt  Distinguished Service Medal to men and women who have achieved the  highest levels of public service, scholarship and discovery, in the  spirit of TR’s selfless service, strenuous endeavor, patriotic idealism,  and practical accomplishments. In the 2000s, the Association  established the Theodore Roosevelt Medal of Honor to recognize  individuals who have contributed substantially to American public life,  letters and science. In partnership with the Roosevelt Study Center in  Middelburg, The Netherlands, the TRA also supports the Theodore  Roosevelt American History Award, which annually recognizes the three  best Masters theses in American history written by Dutch graduate  students in the previous academic year.
Since 1982, the TRA occasionally has bestowed the Bertha Benkard Rose  Award for outstanding service to the Association, in honor of Mrs.  Rose, a leader in historic preservation and in the restoration of  Sagamore Hill, who served on the TRA Executive Committee for 26 years  until her death. One month after she died, the TRA Executive Committee  established the Rose Award to recognize officers and members of the  Association who have followed the example of Mrs. Rose’s energetic  leadership, hard work and inspired efforts on behalf of the TRA.
Today the TRA continues to support the Theodore Roosevelt Collection  at and the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Fund at the American Museum of  Natural History. We also consult and collaborate with the National Park  Service on the use of endowed funds for the Birthplace and Sagamore  Hill. 
In the late 2000s, the TRA briefly pursued then ended plans to  establish in Oyster Bay the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Museum and  Research Center. The Executive Committee ultimately decided the TRA  could best meet its mission without investing in and operating a major  site. Today we are continuing to promote Roosevelt’s ideals and legacies  with a particular emphasis on America’s youth.