FAQ
Answers to the most common questions about the TR Site.
Since its inception, the TR Site’s daily operations have been managed by a local board of trustees — the Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural Site Foundation — through a cooperative agreement with the National Park Service (NPS). The TR Site is the only NPS unit located in Western New York.
Annual operating costs are shared by the NPS and the TR Site Foundation. The Foundation raises its portion of these costs largely within the local community, through various fundraising efforts as well as grants and donations.
The Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site preserves the home in Buffalo, New York, where Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th President of the United States in 1901; promotes opportunities for the public to understand the historic events surrounding the inauguration; and fosters discussion of Roosevelt, his presidency, and his legacy. (Revised 2018)
The Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural Site Foundation is a 501(c)3 charitable organization founded in 1968 to operate, maintain, and interpret the historic home where Theodore Roosevelt took the Presidential Oath of Office following the assassination of President William McKinley in 1901.
The home and site are units of the National Park Service, the only NPS location in Western New York, and are managed by the Foundation through a cooperative agreement. This is altogether fitting as it was President Theodore Roosevelt himself who laid the groundwork for later advances in federal policy that led to a robust National Park system in the United States. Theodore Roosevelt, well known for his commitment to conservation of land and wildlife for public enjoyment, signed into law the 1906 Antiquities Act, giving the president the power to protect cultural and natural resources on public land.
The TR Site was added to the National Registry of Historic Places on November 2, 1966 and was the first National Landmark in Buffalo and Erie County. Enabling legislation was signed into law in 1980 identifying the TRIS Foundation as an external partner of the NPS who maintains, operates, and interprets the TR Site through a cooperative agreement. That same enabling legislation also includes verbiage indicating that the Department of the Interior may provide up to 2/3 of the Site’s operating budget.
As of 2025, the National Park Service provides about 1/3 of the Site’s operating budget and the Foundation raises the remaining amount through donations, grants, ticket sales, special events and programs, group tours, sponsorships, rentals, and gift shop purchases.
President: Christopher E. Copeland, Esq.
Vice President: Kevin T. Kelly
Secretary: Bradley A. Hoppe
Treasurer: Geoffrey M. McDermid, CLTC, LUTCF
Ronald J. Battaglia, Esq.
W. Charles Brandy
Michael J. Cavanaugh
Mark J. DePalma
Bruce J. Dierenfield, Ph.D.
Catherine A. Gura
Erin C. Klass, MBA
Dan D. Kohane
Jean Sheila M. Sanders
Aaron M. Saykin, Esq.
Emily H. Schimert
Lawrence D. Seymour
Trevor M. Torcello, Esq.
Anne E. Ward
Cindy Abbott Letro
George F. Bellows, Esq.
Willow R. Brost
Mark J. Crawford, Ed.D.
Donald I. Dussing, Jr.
Leslie G. Foschio
Patricia Hain
Sheila Montfort Hess
Maureen Saab
Karen Gaughan Scott, Esq.
Jake Schneider, AIA
Sujata Yalamanchili, Esq.
Molly Quackenbush
Stanton H. Hudson, Jr.
Answers to the most common questions about the TR Site.
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