Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT
- Born: 30 Jan 1882, Hyde Park, Dutchess Co., NY
- Marriage: Us First Lady Anna Eleanor ROOSEVELT 17 Mar 1905, New York, NY
- Died: 12 Apr 1945, Warm Springs, GA at age 63
Another name
for Franklin was 32nd President Of The United STATES.
General
Notes:
http://www.time.com/time/time100/leaders/profile/franklin.html Perhaps no
form of government," said Lord Bryce, "needs great leaders as much as
democracy." For democracy is not self-executing. It takes leadership to bring
democracy to life. Great democratic leaders are visionaries. They have an
instinct for their nation's future, a course to steer, a port to seek. Through
their capacity for persuasion, they win the consent of their people and call
forth democracy's inner resources.
Democracy has been around for a bit,
but the 20th century has been the crucial century of its trial, testing and
triumph. At the century's start, democracy was thought to be spreading
irresistibly across the world. Then the Great War, the war of 1914-18, showed
that democracy could not assure peace. Postwar disillusion activated democracy's
two deadly foes: fascism and communism. Soon the Great Depression in the 1930s
showed that democracy could not assure prosperity either, and the totalitarian
creeds gathered momentum.
The Second World War found democracy fighting
for its life. By 1941 there were only a dozen or so democratic states left on
earth. But great leadership emerged in time to rally the democratic cause.
Future historians, looking back at this most bloody of centuries, will very
likely regard the 32nd President of the U.S., Franklin Delano Roosevelt, as the
leader most responsible for mobilizing democratic energies and faith first
against economic collapse and then against military terror.
F.D.R. was
the best loved and most hated American President of the 20th century. He was
loved because, though patrician by birth, upbringing and style, he believed in
and fought for plain people--for the "forgotten man" (and woman), for the "third
of the nation, ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished." He was loved because he
radiated personal charm, joy in his work, optimism for the future. Even Charles
de Gaulle, who well knew Roosevelt's disdain for him, succumbed to the
"glittering personality," as he put it, of "that artist, that seducer." "Meeting
him," said Winston Churchill, "was like uncorking a bottle of champagne."
But he was hated too--hated because he called for change, and the changes he
proposed reduced the power, status, income and self-esteem of those who profited
most from the old order. Hatred is happily more fleeting than love. The men who
sat in their clubs denouncing "that man in the White House," that "traitor to
his class," have died off. Their children and grandchildren mostly find the New
Deal reforms familiar, benign and beneficial.
When pollster John Zogby
recently asked people to rate the century's Presidents, F.D.R. led the pack,
even though only septuagenarians and their elders can remember him in the White
House. Historians and political scientists are unanimous in placing F.D.R. with
Washington and Lincoln as our three greatest Presidents.
Even Republicans
have come to applaud this most successful of Democrats. Ronald Reagan voted four
times for F.D.R. Newt Gingrich calls F.D.R. the greatest President of the
century. Bob Dole praises F.D.R. as an "energetic and inspiring leader during
the dark days of the Depression; a tough, single-minded Commander in Chief
during World War II; and a statesman."
F.D.R. was not a perfect man. In
the service of his objectives, he could be, and often was, devious, guileful,
manipulative, evasive, dissembling, underhanded, even ruthless. But he had great
strengths. He relished power and organized, or disorganized, his Administration
so that conflict among his subordinates would ensure that the big decisions
would come to him. A politician to his fingertips, he rejoiced in party combat.
"I'm an old campaigner, and I love a good fight," he would say, and "Judge me by
the enemies I have made." An optimist who fought his own brave way back from
polio, he brought confidence and hope to a scared and stricken nation.
He
was a realist in means but an idealist in ends. Above all, F.D.R. stood for
humanity against ideology. The 20th was the most ideological of centuries. Adolf
Hitler and Joseph Stalin systematically sacrificed millions to false and
terrible dogmas. Even within the democracies, ideologues believed that the Great
Depression imposed an either/or choice: if you abandon laissez-faire, you are
condemned to total statism. "Partial regimentation cannot be made to work," said
Herbert Hoover, "and still maintain live democratic institutions."
Against the worship of abstractions, F.D.R. wanted to find practical ways to
help decent men and women struggling day by day to make a happier world for
themselves and their children. His technique was, as he said, "bold, persistent
experimentation ... Take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly and
try another. But above all, try something." Except for the part about admitting
failure frankly, that was the practice of his Administration.
When he
came to office in 1933, laissez-faire had undermined the temples of capitalism,
thrown a quarter of the labor force out of work, cut the gross national product
almost in half and provoked mutterings of revolution. No one knew why things had
gone wrong or how to set them right. Only communists were happy, seeing in the
Great Depression decisive proof of Karl Marx's prophecy that capitalism would be
destroyed by its own contradictions.
Then F.D.R. appeared, a magnificent,
serene, exhilarating personality, buoyantly embodying new ideas, new courage,
new confidence in America's ability to regain control over its future. His New
Deal swiftly introduced measures for social protection, regulation and control.
Laissez-faire ideologues and Roosevelt haters cried that he was putting the
country on the road to communism, the only alternative permitted by the
either/or creed. But Roosevelt understood that Social Security, unemployment
compensation, public works, securities regulation, rural electrification, farm
price supports, reciprocal-trade agreements, minimum wages and maximum hours,
guarantees of collective bargaining and all the rest were saving capitalism from
itself.
"The test of our progress," he said in his second Inaugural, "is
not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether
we provide enough for those who have too little." The job situation improved in
the 1930s, aided by the Works Progress Administration, the famous WPA, with
which government as employer of last resort built schools, post offices,
airfields, parks, bridges, tunnels and sewage systems; protected the
environment; and fostered the arts. By the 1940 election, the anticapitalist
vote, almost a million in 1932, had dwindled to 150,000.
The New Deal
never quite solved the problem of unemployment. Though F.D.R. was portrayed as a
profligate spender, his largest peacetime deficit was a feeble $3.6 billion in
1936--far less, even when corrected for inflation, than deficits routinely
produced 50 years later by Reagan. It took World War II and the Defense
Department to create deficits large enough to wipe out unemployment, proving the
case for a compensatory fiscal policy.
Before F.D.R., the U.S. had had a
depression every 20 years or so. The built-in economic stabilizers of the New
Deal, vociferously denounced by business leaders at the time, have preserved the
country against major depressions for more than a half-century. F.D.R.'s signal
domestic achievement was to rescue capitalism from the capitalists.
"We
are fighting," he said in 1936, "to save a great and precious form of government
for ourselves and for the world." F.D.R.'s brilliant (and sometimes not so
brilliant) improvisations restored America's faith in democratic institutions.
Elsewhere on the planet, democracy was under assault. Hitler was on the march in
Europe. Japan had invaded China and dreamed of a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity
Sphere under Japanese domination.
F.D.R.'s education in foreign affairs
had been at the hands of two Presidents he greatly admired. Theodore Roosevelt,
his kinsman (a fifth cousin), taught him national-interest, balance-of-power
geopolitics. Woodrow Wilson, whom he served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy,
gave him the vision of a world beyond balances of power, an international order
founded on the collective maintenance of the peace. F.D.R.'s internationalism
used T.R.'s realism as the heart of Wilson's idealism.
But Americans,
disenchanted with their participation in the Great War, had turned their backs
on the world and reverted to isolationism. Rigid neutrality acts denied the
President authority to discriminate between aggressor states and their victims
and thereby prevented the U.S. from throwing its weight against aggression.
To awaken his country from its isolationist slumber, Roosevelt began a long,
urgent, eloquent campaign of popular education, warning that unchecked
aggression abroad would ultimately endanger the U.S. itself. "Let no one imagine
that America will escape, that America may expect mercy," he said. The debate in
1940-41 between isolationists and interventionists was the most passionate
political argument of my lifetime. It came to an abrupt end when Japanese bombs
fell on Pearl Harbor.
As war leader, F.D.R. picked an extraordinary team
of generals and admirals. In partnership with Churchill, he presided over the
vital strategic decisions. And also, in the footsteps of Wilson, he was
determined that victory should produce a framework for lasting world peace.
He saw the war as bringing about historic changes--the rise of Russia and China,
for example, and the end of Western colonialism. He tried to persuade the
British to give India its independence and tried to stop the French from
repossessing Indochina. In the Four Freedoms and, with Churchill, in the
Atlantic Charter, he proclaimed war aims in words that continue to express the
world's aspirations today.
Remembering America's reversion to
isolationism after World War I, he set out to involve the U.S. in postwar
structures while the war was still on and the country still in an
internationalist frame of mind. "Anybody who thinks that isolationism is dead in
this country is crazy," he said privately. "As soon as this war is over, it may
well be stronger than ever."
In a series of conferences in 1944, he
committed the country to international mechanisms in a variety of
fields--finance and trade, relief and reconstruction, food and agriculture,
civil aviation. Most of all, he saw the United Nations, in the words of the
diplomat Charles E. Bohlen, as "the only device that could keep the U.S. from
slipping back into isolationism." He arranged for the U.N.'s founding conference
to take place in San Francisco before the war was over (though it turned out to
be after his own death in April 1945 at the age of 63).
The great riddle
for the peace was the Soviet Union. Perhaps Roosevelt, as some argue, should
have conditioned aid to Russia during the war on pledges of postwar good
behavior. But the fate of the second front in the west depended on the Red
Army's holding down Nazi divisions in the east, and neither Roosevelt nor
Churchill wanted to delay Stalin's military offensives--or to drive him to make
a separate peace with Hitler.
With the war approaching its end, the two
democratic leaders met Stalin at Yalta. Some say that this meeting brought about
the division of Europe. In fact, far from endorsing Soviet control of Eastern
Europe, Roosevelt and Churchill secured from Stalin pledges of "the earliest
possible establishment through free elections of governments responsive to the
will of the people." Stalin had to break the Yalta agreements to achieve his
ends--which would seem to prove the agreements were more in the Western than the
Soviet interest. In fact, Eastern Europe today is what the Yalta Declarations
mandated in 1945.
Take a look at our present world. It is manifestly not
Adolf Hitler's world. His Thousand-Year Reich turned out to have a brief and
bloody run of a dozen years. It is manifestly not Joseph Stalin's world. That
ghastly world self-destructed before our eyes. Nor is it Winston Churchill's
world. Empire and its glories have long since vanished into history.
The
world we live in today is Franklin Roosevelt's world. Of the figures who for
good or evil dominated the planet 60 years ago, he would be least surprised by
the shape of things at the millennium. And confident as he was of the power and
vitality of democracy, he would welcome the challenges posed by the century to
come.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, said Isaiah Berlin, was one of the few
statesmen in any century "who seemed to have no fear at all of the future."
Pulitzer-prize winning historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. is the author of The Age
of Roosevelt. He is currently at work on his memoirs
Assuming the
Presidency at the depth of the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt helped
the American people regain faith in themselves. He brought hope as he promised
prompt, vigorous action, and asserted in his Inaugural Address, "the only
thing we have to fear is fear itself."
Born in 1882 at Hyde Park, New
York--now a national historic site--he attended Harvard University and Columbia
Law School. On St. Patrick's Day, 1905, he married Eleanor Roosevelt.
Following the example of his fifth cousin, President Theodore Roosevelt, whom he
greatly admired, Franklin D. Roosevelt entered public service through politics,
but as a Democrat. He won election to the New York Senate in 1910. President
Wilson appointed him Assistant Secretary of the Navy, and he was the Democratic
nominee for Vice President in 1920.
In the summer of 1921, when he was
39, disaster hit-he was stricken with poliomyelitis. Demonstrating indomitable
courage, he fought to regain the use of his legs, particularly through swimming.
At the 1924 Democratic Convention he dramatically appeared on crutches to
nominate Alfred E. Smith as "the Happy Warrior." In 1928 Roosevelt became
Governor of New York.
He was elected President in November 1932, to the
first of four terms. By March there were 13,000,000 unemployed, and almost every
bank was closed. In his first "hundred days," he proposed, and Congress enacted,
a sweeping program to bring recovery to business and agriculture, relief to the
unemployed and to those in danger of losing farms and homes, and reform,
especially through the establishment of the Tennessee Valley Authority.
By 1935 the Nation had achieved some measure of recovery, but businessmen and
bankers were turning more and more against Roosevelt's New Deal program. They
feared his experiments, were appalled because he had taken the Nation off the
gold standard and allowed deficits in the budget, and disliked the concessions
to labor. Roosevelt responded with a new program of reform: Social Security,
heavier taxes on the wealthy, new controls over banks and public utilities, and
an enormous work relief program for the unemployed.
In 1936 he was
re-elected by a top-heavy margin. Feeling he was armed with a popular mandate,
he sought legislation to enlarge the Supreme Court, which had been invalidating
key New Deal measures. Roosevelt lost the Supreme Court battle, but a revolution
in constitutional law took place. Thereafter the Government could legally
regulate the economy.
Roosevelt had pledged the United States to the
"good neighbor" policy, transforming the Monroe Doctrine from a unilateral
American manifesto into arrangements for mutual action against aggressors. He
also sought through neutrality legislation to keep the United States out of the
war in Europe, yet at the same time to strengthen nations threatened or
attacked. When France fell and England came under siege in 1940, he began to
send Great Britain all possible aid short of actual military involvement.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Roosevelt directed
organization of the Nation's manpower and resources for global war.
Feeling that the future peace of the world would depend upon relations between
the United States and Russia, he devoted much thought to the planning of a
United Nations, in which, he hoped, international difficulties could be settled.
As the war drew to a close, Roosevelt's health deteriorated, and on April 12,
1945, while at Warm Springs, Georgia, he died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
Franklin married Us First Lady Anna
Eleanor ROOSEVELT, daughter of Elliott ROOSEVELT and Anna Livingston HALL, on 17
Mar 1905 in New York, NY. (Us First Lady Anna Eleanor ROOSEVELT was born in 1884
in New York, Kings County, NY and died in 1962 in Hyde Park, Dutchess Co., NY.)
|