Several items in the cabin today did belong to Theodore Roosevelt. The rest of the items are period pieces representing typical furnishings of the day. The hutch in the living room was used as a desk with shelves holding his small library and the fold-out counter top acting as a writing table to indulge two of TR's passions -reading and writing. Roosevelt spent many hours laboring at the makeshift desk recording his memoirs and reminiscences of badlands life. The traditional rocking chair in the living room is believed to have been Roosevelt's. Rocking chairs were his favorite piece of furniture, all of his homes had rocking chairs, and Roosevelt once wrote, "What true American does not enjoy a rocking-chair?" Roosevelt's traveling trunk sits in the bedroom and is inscribed with his initials.
Roosevelt actively ranched in the badlands only until early 1887, but maintained ranching interests in the area until 1898. Later, as president, he developed a conservation program that deeply reflected his many experiences in the West. It was through these experiences that he became keenly aware of the need to conserve and protect natural resources.
During Roosevelt's presidency, the Maltese Cross cabin was exhibited at the World's Fair in St. Louis, MO and at the Louis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland, OR. Later it was moved to the state fair grounds in Fargo, ND and then eventually to the state capitol grounds in Bismarck where it remained for 50 years. In 1959, the cabin was relocated to its present site and renovated. The most recent preservation work occurred in 2000.
His second ranch, the Elkhorn, was built in 1884 and was located about 35 miles north of Medora on the Little Missouri River. After its construction, Roosevelt considered the Elkhorn his "home ranch" and spent most of his time there whenever he was in residence in Dakota.