Us First Lady Anna Eleanor ROOSEVELT
- Born: 1884, New York, Kings County, NY
- Marriage: Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT 17 Mar 1905, New York, NY
- Died: 1962, Hyde Park, Dutchess Co., NY at age 78
General
Notes:
Source:
www.wic.org/bio/roosevel.htm World-renowned, respected, and admired, Eleanor
Roosevelt made many lasting and meaningful contributions to the welfare of
mankind which have stood the rigorous test of time. Her humanitarian efforts on
behalf of children, the oppressed and the poor earned her the love of millions
throughout the world. She was, as President Truman said, "First Lady of the
World."
Her entire life was dedicated to others, even in the face of
serious setbacks. When her husband's promising career seemed doomed by the
crippling effects of polio, her help and encouragement gave him the will to
persevere that eventually brought him to the Presidency of the United States.
Both in private and public life, Mrs. Roosevelt manifested an unequaled concern
for others. She taught at a school she had set up for poor children, ran a
factory for the jobless and was an ardent advocate of equal rights--when that
was an unpopular stand to take.
As First Lady, Mrs. Roosevelt was an
energetic and outspoken representative of the needs of people suffering from the
Great Depression. Many of her ideas were incorporated into the New Deal Social
Welfare Program.
During World War 11, she expanded her activities to the
world stage, working at the United Nations to help found UNICEF and establish
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Later, she was named chairman of the
Human Rights Commission and, at age 61, was asked to serve as a delegate to the
first meeting of the General Assembly of the United Nations.
Eleanor
Roosevelt was quoted as saying "You get more joy out of the giving to others,
and should put a good deal of thought into the happiness you are able to give."
Eleanor Roosevelt is truly a paragon of greatness.
Source:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/firstladies/ar32.html A shy, awkward child,
starved for recognition and love, Eleanor Roosevelt grew into a woman with great
sensitivity to the underprivileged of all creeds, races, and nations. Her
constant work to improve their lot made her one of the most loved--and for some
years one of the most reviled--women of her generation.
She was born in
New York City on October 11, 1884, daughter of lovely Anna Hall and Elliott
Roosevelt, younger brother of Theodore. When her mother died in 1892, the
children went to live with Grandmother Hall; her adored father died only two
years later. Attending a distinguished school in England gave her, at 15, her
first chance to develop self-confidence among other girls.
Tall, slender,
graceful of figure but apprehensive at the thought of being a wallflower, she
returned for a debut that she dreaded. In her circle of friends was a distant
cousin, handsome young Franklin Delano Roosevelt. They became engaged in 1903
and were married in 1905, with her uncle the President giving the bride away.
Within eleven years Eleanor bore six children; one son died in infancy. "I
suppose I was fitting pretty well into the pattern of a fairly conventional,
quiet, young society matron," she wrote later in her autobiography.
In
Albany, where Franklin served in the state Senate from 1910 to 1913, Eleanor
started her long career as political helpmate. She gained a knowledge of
Washington and its ways while he served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. When
he was stricken with poliomyelitis in 1921, she tended him devotedly. She became
active in the women's division of the State Democratic Committee to keep his
interest in politics alive. From his successful campaign for governor in 1928 to
the day of his death, she dedicated her life to his purposes. She became eyes
and ears for him, a trusted and tireless reporter.
When Mrs. Roosevelt
came to the White House in 1933, she understood social conditions better than
any of her predecessors and she transformed the role of First Lady accordingly.
She never shirked official entertaining; she greeted thousands with charming
friendliness. She also broke precedent to hold press conferences, travel to all
parts of the country, give lectures and radio broadcasts, and express her
opinions candidly in a daily syndicated newspaper column, "My Day."
This
made her a tempting target for political enemies but her integrity, her
graciousness, and her sincerity of purpose endeared her personally to many--from
heads of state to servicemen she visited abroad during World War II. As she had
written wistfully at 14: "...no matter how plain a woman may be if truth &
loyalty are stamped upon her face all will be attracted to her...."
After
the President's death in 1945 she returned to a cottage at his Hyde Park estate;
she told reporters: "the story is over." Within a year, however, she began her
service as American spokesman in the United Nations. She continued a vigorous
career until her strength began to wane in 1962. She died in New York City that
November, and was buried at Hyde Park beside her husband.
http://www.time.com/time/time100/leaders/profile/eleanor.html When Eleanor
Roosevelt journeyed to New York City a week after her husband's funeral in April
1945, a cluster of reporters were waiting at the door of her Washington Square
apartment. "The story is over," she said simply, assuming that her words and
opinions would no longer be of interest once her husband was dead and she was no
longer First Lady. She could not have been more mistaken. As the years have
passed, Eleanor Roosevelt's influence and stature have continued to grow. Today
she remains a powerful inspiration to leaders in both the civil rights and
women's movements.
Eleanor shattered the ceremonial mold in which the
role of the First Lady had traditionally been fashioned, and reshaped it around
her own skills and her deep commitment to social reform. She gave a voice to
people who did not have access to power. She was the first woman to speak in
front of a national convention, to write a syndicated column, to earn money as a
lecturer, to be a radio commentator and to hold regular press conferences.
The path to this unique position of power had not been easy. The only daughter
of an alcoholic father and a beautiful but aloof mother who was openly
disappointed by Eleanor's lack of a pretty face, Eleanor was plagued by
insecurity and shyness. An early marriage to her handsome fifth cousin once
removed, Franklin Roosevelt, increased her insecurity and took away her one
source of confidence: her work in a New York City settlement house. "For 10
years, I was always just getting over having a baby or about to have another
one," she later lamented, "so my occupations were considerably restricted."
But 13 years after her marriage, and after bearing six children, Eleanor resumed
the search for her identity. The voyage began with a shock: the discovery in
1918 of love letters revealing that Franklin was involved with Lucy Mercer. "The
bottom dropped out of my own particular world," she later said. "I faced myself,
my surroundings, my world, honestly for the first time." There was talk of
divorce, but when Franklin promised never to see Lucy again, the marriage
continued. For Eleanor a new path had opened, a possibility of standing apart
from Franklin. No longer would she define herself solely in terms of his wants
and needs. A new relationship was forged, on terms wholly different from the
old.
She turned her energies to a variety of reformist organizations,
joining a circle of postsuffrage feminists dedicated to the abolition of child
labor, the establishment of a minimum wage and the passage of legislation to
protect workers. In the process she discovered that she had talents--for public
speaking, for organizing, for articulating social problems. She formed an
extraordinary constellation of lifelong female friends, who helped to assuage an
enduring sense of loneliness. When Franklin was paralyzed by polio in 1921, her
political activism became an even more vital force. She became Franklin's "eyes
and ears," traveling the country gathering the grass-roots knowledge he needed
to understand the people he governed.
They made an exceptional team. She
was more earnest, less devious, less patient, less fun, more uncompromisingly
moral; he possessed the more trustworthy political talent, the more finely tuned
sense of timing, the better feel for the citizenry, the smarter understanding of
how to get things done. But they were linked by indissoluble bonds. Together
they mobilized the American people to effect enduring changes in the political
and social landscape of the nation.
Nowhere was Eleanor's influence
greater than in civil rights. In her travels around the country, she developed a
sophisticated understanding of race relations. When she first began inspecting
New Deal programs in the South, she was stunned to find that blacks were being
systematically discriminated against at every turn. Citing statistics to back up
her story, she would interrupt her husband at any time, barging into his
cocktail hour when he wanted only to relax, cross-examining him at dinner,
handing him memos to read late at night. But her confrontational style compelled
him to sign a series of Executive Orders barring discrimination in the
administration of various New Deal projects. From that point on, African
Americans' share in the New Deal work projects expanded, and Eleanor's
independent legacy began to grow.
She understood, for instance, the
importance of symbolism in fighting discrimination. In 1938, while attending the
Southern Conference for Human Welfare in Birmingham, Ala., she refused to abide
by a segregation ordinance that required her to sit in the white section of the
auditorium, apart from her black friends. The following year, she publicly
resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution after it barred the black
singer Marian Anderson from its auditorium.
During World War II, Eleanor
remained an uncompromising voice on civil rights, insisting that America could
not fight racism abroad while tolerating it at home. Progress was slow, but her
continuing intervention led to broadened opportunities for blacks in the
factories and shipyards at home and in the armed forces overseas. Eleanor's
positions on civil rights were far in advance of her time: 10 years before the
Supreme Court rejected the "separate but equal" doctrine, Eleanor argued that
equal facilities were not enough: "The basic fact of segregation, which warps
and twists the lives of our Negro population, [is] itself discriminatory."
There were other warps and twists that caught her eye. Long before the
contemporary women's movement provided ideological arguments for women's rights,
Eleanor instinctively challenged institutions that failed to provide equal
opportunity for women. As First Lady, she held more than 300 press conferences
that she cleverly restricted to women journalists, knowing that news
organizations all over the country would be forced to hire their first female
reporter in order to have access to the First Lady.
Through her speeches
and her columns, she provided a powerful voice in the campaign to recruit women
workers to the factories during the war. "If I were of debutante age, I would go
into a factory, where I could learn a skill and be useful," Eleanor told young
women, cautioning them against marrying too hastily before they had a chance to
expand their horizons. She was instrumental in securing the first government
funds ever allotted for the building of child-care centers. And when women
workers were unceremoniously fired as the war came to an end, she fought to stem
the tide. She argued on principle that everyone who wanted to work had a right
to be productive, and she railed against the closing of the child-care centers
as a shortsighted response to a fundamental social need. What the women workers
needed, she said, was the courage to ask for their rights with a loud voice.
For her own part, she never let the intense criticism that she encountered
silence her. "If I ... worried about mudslinging, I would have been dead long
ago." Yet she insisted that she was not a feminist. She did not believe, she
maintained, that "women should be judged, when it comes to appointing them or
electing them, purely because they are women." She wanted to see the country
"get away from considering a man or woman from the point of view of religion,
color or sex." But the story of her life--her insistence on her right to an
identity of her own apart from her husband and her family, her constant struggle
against depression and insecurity, her ability to turn her vulnerabilities into
strengths--provides an enduring example of a feminist who transcended the
dictates of her times to become one of the century's most powerful and effective
advocates for social justice.
Doris Kearns Goodwin is a
Pulitzer-prizewinning author, historian and political analyst
Anna married Franklin Delano
ROOSEVELT, son of James ROOSEVELT and Sara Ann DELANO, on 17 Mar 1905 in New
York, NY. (Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT was born on 30 Jan 1882 in Hyde Park,
Dutchess Co., NY and died on 12 Apr 1945 in Warm Springs, GA.)
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