Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Photo by Leon A. Perski, 1944
32nd President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1933  April 12, 1945
Vice President John N. Garner (1933–1941)
Henry A. Wallace (1941–1945)
Harry S. Truman (1945)
Preceded by Herbert Hoover
Succeeded by Harry S. Truman
44th Governor of New York
In office
January 1, 1929  December 31, 1932
Lieutenant Herbert H. Lehman
Preceded by Al Smith
Succeeded by Herbert H. Lehman
Assistant Secretary of the Navy
In office
March 17, 1913  August 26, 1920
President Woodrow Wilson
Preceded by Beekman Winthrop
Succeeded by Gordon Woodbury
Member of the New York State Senate
for the 26th District
In office
January 1, 1911  March 17, 1913
Preceded by John F. Schlosser
Succeeded by James E. Towner
Personal details
Born Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(1882-01-30)January 30, 1882
Hyde Park, New York, U.S.
Died April 12, 1945(1945-04-12) (aged 63)
Warm Springs, Georgia, U.S.
Cause of death Cerebral hemorrhage
Resting place Home of FDR National Historic Site, Hyde Park, New York
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Eleanor Roosevelt (m. 1905)
Relations See Roosevelt family and Delano family
Children
Parents James Roosevelt I
Sara Roosevelt
Education
Signature Cursive signature in ink

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (/ˈrzəvəlt/, his own pronunciation,[2] or /ˈrzəvɛlt/; January 30, 1882 – April 12, 1945), commonly known as FDR, was an American statesman and political leader who served as the 32nd President of the United States from 1933 until his death in 1945. A Democrat, he won a record four presidential elections and emerged as a central figure in world events during the mid-20th century. He directed the United States government during most of the Great Depression and World War II. As a dominant leader of his party, he built the New Deal Coalition, realigning American politics into the Fifth Party System and defining American liberalism throughout the middle third of the 20th century. He is often rated by scholars as one of the three greatest U.S. Presidents, along with George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.[3]

Roosevelt was born in 1882 to an old, prominent Dutch-American family from Dutchess County, New York and attended Groton School. He went on to graduate from Harvard College in 1903 and attended Columbia Law School. At age 23 in 1905, he married Eleanor Roosevelt, and the couple went on to have six children. He entered politics in 1910, serving in the New York State Senate, and then as Assistant Secretary of the Navy under President Woodrow Wilson. In 1920, presidential candidate James M. Cox selected Roosevelt as his running mate, but the Cox/Roosevelt ticket lost to the Republican ticket of Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge. In 1921, Roosevelt was stricken with debilitating polio, which cost him the use of his legs. The disability put his future political career in jeopardy, but he attempted to recover from the illness and founded the treatment center in Warm Springs, Georgia for people with polio. Roosevelt returned to political life when he nominated Alfred E. Smith at the 1924 Democratic National Convention. At Smith's behest, Roosevelt successfully ran for Governor of New York in 1928. He was in office from 1929 to 1933 and served as a reform governor, promoting the enactment of programs to combat the depression besetting the United States at the time.

In the 1932 presidential election, Roosevelt defeated incumbent Republican president Herbert Hoover in a landslide to win the presidency. Roosevelt took office while the United States was in the midst of the worst economic crisis in its history. Energized by his personal victory over polio, FDR relied on his persistent optimism and activism to renew the national spirit.[4][5] During his first 100 days in office, Roosevelt spearheaded unprecedented federal legislation and issued a profusion of executive orders that instituted the New Deal—a variety of programs designed to produce relief (government jobs for the unemployed), recovery (economic growth), and reform (through regulation of Wall Street, banks and transportation). He created numerous programs to support the unemployed and farmers, and to encourage labor union growth while more closely regulating business and high finance. His support for the repeal of Prohibition in 1933 added to his popularity, helping him win re-election by a landslide in 1936. The economy improved rapidly from 1933–37, but then relapsed into a deep recession in 1937–38. The bipartisan Conservative Coalition that formed in 1937 prevented his packing the Supreme Court, and blocked almost all proposals for major liberal legislation (except the minimum wage, which did pass). When the war began and unemployment ended, conservatives in Congress repealed the two major relief programs, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). However, they kept most of the regulations on business. Along with several smaller programs, major surviving programs include the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Wagner Act, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Social Security.

With World War II looming after 1938 with the Japanese invasion of China and the aggression of Nazi Germany, Roosevelt gave strong diplomatic and financial support to China and the United Kingdom, while remaining officially neutral. His goal was to make America the "Arsenal of Democracy", which would supply munitions to the Allies. In March 1941, Roosevelt, with Congressional approval, provided Lend-Lease aid to Britain and China. Following the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, which he famously called "a date which will live in infamy", Roosevelt sought and obtained the quick approval on the following day for Congress to declare war on Japan and, a few days later, on Germany. Assisted by his top aide Harry Hopkins, and with very strong national support, he worked closely with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in leading the Allies against Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan and Fascist Italy in World War II. He supervised the mobilization of the U.S. economy to support the war effort, and also ordered the internment of 100,000 Japanese American civilians. As an active military leader, Roosevelt implemented a war strategy on two fronts that ended in the defeat of the Axis Powers, and he initiated the development of the world's first atomic bomb. His work also influenced the later creation of the United Nations and Bretton Woods. Roosevelt's physical health seriously declined during the war years, and he died 11 weeks into his fourth term. He was then succeeded by his vice president Harry S. Truman, and a few months after Truman's inauguration, the United States bombed the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading to Japan's surrender.

Personal life

Early life and education

One of the oldest Dutch-American families in New York State, the Roosevelts[lower-alpha 1] distinguished themselves in areas other than politics. One ancestor, Isaac Roosevelt, had served with the New York militia during the American Revolution.[7]

Roosevelt attended events of the New York society Sons of the American Revolution, and joined the organization while he was president. His paternal family had become prosperous early on in New York real estate and trade, and much of his immediate family's wealth had been built by FDR's maternal grandfather, Warren Delano, Jr., in the China trade, including opium and tea.[8]

A young, unbreeched Roosevelt in 1884, 2 years old[lower-alpha 2]
Roosevelt in 1893, at the age of 11
Roosevelt in 1900, at the age of 18

Roosevelt was born on January 30, 1882, in the Hudson Valley town of Hyde Park, New York, to businessman James Roosevelt I and Sara Ann Delano. His parents were sixth cousins[7] and both were from wealthy old New York families. They were of mostly English descent; Roosevelt's patrilineal great-grandfather, Jacobus Roosevelt III, was of Dutch ancestry, and his mother's maiden name, Delano, could be traced to French Huguenot immigrant ancestors of the 17th century.[10][11] Their only child[12] was to have been named Warren, but Sara's infant nephew of that name had recently died.[13] Their son was named for Sara's uncle Franklin Hughes Delano.[10]

Roosevelt grew up in an atmosphere of privilege. Reportedly, when James Roosevelt took his five-year-old son[14] to visit President Grover Cleveland in the White House, the busy president told Franklin, "I have one wish for you, little man, that you will never be President of the United States."[15] Sara was a possessive mother. James, who was 54 when Franklin was born, was considered by some as a remote father, though biographer James MacGregor Burns indicates James interacted with his son more than was typical at the time.[16] Sara was the dominant influence in Franklin's early years;[17] she once declared, "My son Franklin is a Delano, not a Roosevelt at all."[7] She also made him wear dresses, and keep his hair long during this time[18]. Frequent trips to Europe—he made his first excursion at the age of two and went with his parents every year from the ages of seven to fifteen—helped Roosevelt become conversant in German and French.[19][20] Roosevelt and his tutor were arrested by police four times in one day in the Black Forest for minor offenses that may have affected the future president's view of German character.[21] He thought that the Germans were rude, as he noticed they were constantly claiming they were better than others. This would later affect him as president, as he claimed that his experience gave him a deeper understanding of Germany than most diplomats.[22] He learned to ride, shoot, row, and play polo and lawn tennis. He took up golf in his teen years, becoming a skilled long hitter.[23] He learned to sail and when he was 16, his father gave him a sailboat that he named "New Moon".[24]

Roosevelt attended Groton School, an Episcopal boarding school in Groton, Massachusetts; 90% of the students were from families on the social register. He was strongly influenced by its headmaster, Endicott Peabody, who preached the duty of Christians to help the less fortunate and urged his students to enter public service. Forty years later Roosevelt said of Peabody, "It was a blessing in my life to have the privilege of [his] guiding hand",[25] and the headmaster remained a strong influence throughout his life, officiating at his wedding and visiting Roosevelt as president.[26]

Peabody recalled Roosevelt as "a quiet, satisfactory boy of more than ordinary intelligence, taking a good position in his form but not brilliant",[27] while a classmate described Roosevelt as "nice, but completely colorless"; an average student, he only stood out in being the only Democratic student, continuing the political tradition of his side of the Roosevelt family.[28] Roosevelt remained consistent in his politics; immediately after his fourth election to the presidency, he defined his domestic policy as "a little left of center".[29][30]

Like all but two of his twenty one Groton classmates, Roosevelt went to Harvard College in nearby Cambridge, Massachusetts,[31] where he lived in a suite that is now part of Adams House, in the "Gold Coast" area populated by wealthy students. His mother Sara moved to Boston in 1900 to be closer to her son. Roosevelt was again an average student academically,[32] and he later declared, "I took economics courses in college for four years, and everything I was taught was wrong."[33] He was a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity[34] and the Fly Club.[35]

While undistinguished as a student or athlete, he became editor-in-chief of The Harvard Crimson daily newspaper,[36] a position that required great ambition, energy, and the ability to manage others.[37] While he was at Harvard, his fifth cousin Theodore "T. R." Roosevelt, Jr. (1858–1919) became President of the United States; his vigorous leadership style and reforming zeal made him Franklin's role model and hero.[38] The younger Roosevelt remained a Democrat, campaigning for Theodore's opponent William Jennings Bryan.[39] Later, in the 1900s, his father died, causing a great distress for him, leaving Roosevelt alone with his mother, who was rather controlling. He eventually distanced away from her, for independence.[22] In mid-1902, Franklin was formally introduced to his future wife Anna Eleanor Roosevelt (1884–1962), who was Theodore's niece, on a train to Tivoli, New York (they had met briefly as children).[40] Eleanor and Franklin were fifth cousins, once removed.[41] She was the daughter of Elliott Bulloch Roosevelt (1860–94) and Anna Rebecca Hall (1863–92) of the Livingston family. At the time of their engagement, Roosevelt was twenty-two and Eleanor nineteen.[42] He graduated from Harvard in 1903 with an A.B. in history. He later received an honorary LL.D. from Harvard in 1929.[43]

Roosevelt entered Columbia Law School in 1904, but dropped out in 1907 after passing the New York bar exam.[44] Many years later, he posthumously received a J.D. from Columbia Law School.[45] In 1908, he took a job with the prestigious Wall Street firm of Carter Ledyard & Milburn,[44] dealing mainly with corporate law.

He was first initiated into the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and was initiated into Freemasonry on October 11, 1911, at Holland Lodge No. 8, New York City.[46][47]

Marriage and affairs

On March 17, 1905, Roosevelt married Eleanor (née Roosevelt) in New York City, despite the fierce resistance of his mother.[42] While she did not dislike Eleanor, Sara Roosevelt was very possessive of her son, believing he was too young for marriage. Several times she attempted to break the engagement.[48] Eleanor's uncle, President Theodore Roosevelt, stood in at the wedding for Eleanor's deceased father Elliott, as Eleanor was his favorite niece.[49] (Eleanor had lost both parents by age ten.[50])

The young couple moved into Springwood, his family's estate at Hyde Park, where Roosevelt's mother became a frequent house guest, much to Eleanor's chagrin. The home was owned by Roosevelt's mother until her death in 1941 and was very much her home as well. In addition, Franklin Roosevelt and his mother Sara did the planning and furnishing of a town house she had built for the young couple in New York City; she had a twin house built alongside, with connections on every floor. Eleanor never felt it was her house.[51]

Biographer James MacGregor Burns said that young Roosevelt was self-assured and at ease in the upper class.[52] In contrast, Eleanor at the time was shy and disliked social life, and at first stayed at home to raise their several children. Although Eleanor had an aversion to sexual intercourse and considered it "an ordeal to be endured",[53] they had six children, the first four in rapid succession:

Roosevelt welcomed fatherhood, and he and Eleanor suffered greatly when their third child, named for Franklin, died of heart disease in infancy in 1909.[54] Eleanor soon was pregnant again and gave birth to another son, Elliott, less than a year later. The fifth child and fourth son, born in 1914, was also named for Franklin.

Roosevelt had various extra-marital affairs, including one with Eleanor's social secretary Lucy Mercer, which began soon after she was hired in early 1914.[55] In September 1918, Eleanor found letters revealing the affair in Roosevelt's luggage, when he returned from World War I. Franklin had contemplated divorcing Eleanor, but Lucy would not agree to marry a divorced man with five children.[56] Franklin and Eleanor remained married, and FDR promised never to see Lucy again. Eleanor never truly forgave him, and their marriage from that point on was more of a political partnership.[57] Franklin's mother told him that if he divorced his wife, it would bring scandal upon the family, and she "would not give him another dollar."[56]

Franklin broke his promise to Eleanor. He and Lucy maintained a formal correspondence, and began seeing each other again in 1941, perhaps earlier.[58][59] The Secret Service gave Lucy the code name "Mrs. Johnson".[60] Lucy was with FDR on the day he died in 1945. Despite this, FDR's affair was not widely known until the 1960s.[61]

Roosevelt's son Elliott claimed that his father had a 20-year affair with his private secretary, Marguerite "Missy" LeHand.[62] Another son, James, stated that "there is a real possibility that a romantic relationship existed" between his father and Princess Märtha of Sweden, who resided in the White House during part of World War II. Aides began to refer to her at the time as "the president's girlfriend",[63] and gossip linking the two romantically appeared in the newspapers.[64]

The effect of these flirtations or affairs upon Eleanor Roosevelt is difficult to estimate. "I have the memory of an elephant. I can forgive, but I cannot forget," she wrote to a close friend.[65] After the Lucy Mercer affair, any remaining intimacy left their relationship. Eleanor soon thereafter established a separate house in Hyde Park at Val-Kill, and increasingly devoted herself to various social and political causes independently of her husband. The emotional break in their marriage was so severe that when Roosevelt asked Eleanor in 1942—in light of his failing health—to come back home and live with him again, she refused.[61] He was not always aware of when she visited the White House, and for some time she could not easily reach him on the telephone without his secretary's help; he, in turn, did not visit her New York City apartment until late 1944.[66]

When Roosevelt was president, his dog Fala also became well known as his companion during his time in the White House. Fala was called the "most photographed dog in the world".[67]

Early political career

State senator and Tammany antagonist

In the state election of 1910, Roosevelt ran for the New York State Senate from the district around Hyde Park in Dutchess County, which was strongly Republican, having elected one Democrat since 1856. The local party chose him as a paper candidate because his Republican cousin Theodore was still one of the country's most prominent politicians, and a Democratic Roosevelt was good publicity; the candidate could also pay for his own campaign. Surprising almost everyone, due to his aggressive and effective campaign,[68] the Roosevelt name's influence in the Hudson Valley, and the Democratic landslide that year, Roosevelt won the election.[69]

Taking his seat on January 1, 1911, Roosevelt immediately became the leader of a group of "Insurgents" who opposed the bossism of the Tammany machine dominating the state Democratic Party. The U.S. Senate election, which began with the Democratic caucus on January 16, 1911, was deadlocked by the struggle of the two factions for 74 days, as the new legislator endured what a biographer later described as "the full might of Tammany" behind its choice, William F. Sheehan. (Popular election of US Senators did not occur until after a constitutional amendment later that decade.) On March 31 compromise candidate James A. O'Gorman was elected, giving Roosevelt national exposure and some experience in political tactics and intrigue; one Tammany leader warned that Roosevelt should be eliminated immediately, before he disrupted Democrats as much as his cousin disrupted the Republicans.[70][71] Roosevelt soon became a popular figure among New York Democrats, though he had not as yet become an eloquent speaker.[69] News articles and cartoons began depicting "the second coming of a Roosevelt" that sent "cold shivers down the spine of Tammany".[72]

Despite a bout of typhoid fever, and due to the help of Louis McHenry Howe who ran his campaign, Roosevelt was re-elected for a second term in the state election of 1912, and served as chairman of the Agriculture Committee. His success with farm and labor bills was a precursor to his New Deal policies twenty years later.[73] By this time he had become more consistently progressive, in support of labor and social welfare programs for women and children; cousin Theodore was of some influence on these issues.[74] Roosevelt, again in opposition to Tammany Hall, supported southerner Woodrow Wilson's successful bid in the 1912 presidential election, and thereby earned an informal designation as an original Wilson man.[75]

Assistant Secretary of the Navy

Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 1913

Roosevelt's support of Wilson led to his appointment in 1913 as Assistant Secretary of the Navy[76] under Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. Roosevelt had a lifelong affection for the Navy—he had already collected almost 10,000 naval books and claimed to have read all but one—and was more ardent than his boss Daniels in supporting a large and efficient naval force.[77][78] As assistant secretary, Roosevelt worked to expand the Navy and founded the United States Navy Reserve. Against reactionary older officers such as Admiral William Bensonwho claimed he could not "conceive of any use the fleet will ever have for aviation"Roosevelt personally ordered the preservation of the navy's Aviation Division after the war,[79] despite publicly opining that Billy Mitchell's warnings of bombs capable of sinking battleships were "pernicious".[80] Roosevelt negotiated with Congressional leaders and other government departments to get budgets approved. He opposed the Taylor "stop-watch" system, which was hailed by shipbuilding managers but opposed by the unions. Not a single union strike occurred during his seven-plus years in the office,[81] during which Roosevelt gained experience in labor issues, government management during wartime, naval issues, and logistics, all valuable areas for future office.[82]

Roosevelt was still relatively obscure, but his friends were already speaking of him as a future president; he reportedly began talking about being elected to the presidency as early as 1907.[83] In 1914, Roosevelt made an ill-conceived decision to run for the U.S. Senate seat for New York. The decision was doomed for lack of Wilson administration backing. He was determined to take on Tammany again at a time when Wilson needed them to help marshal his legislation and secure his future re-election.[84] He was soundly defeated in the Democratic primary election for the United States Senate by Tammany Hall-backed James W. Gerard, by a margin of 3-to-1. Roosevelt learned a valuable lesson, that federal patronage alone, without White House support, could not defeat a strong local organization.[85]

In March 1917, after Germany initiated its unrestricted submarine warfare campaign, Roosevelt asked Wilson for permission to fit the naval fleet out for war; the request was denied.[86] He became an enthusiastic advocate of the submarine and of means to combat the German submarine menace to Allied shipping: he proposed building a mine barrier across the North Sea from Norway to Scotland.[87] In 1918, he visited Britain and France to inspect American naval facilities.[88] Roosevelt wanted to provide arms to the merchant marine; knowing that a sale of arms was prohibited, he asked Wilson for approval to lease the arms to the mariners. Wilson ultimately approved this by executive order, and a precedent was set for Roosevelt to take similar action in 1940.

During these war years, Roosevelt worked to make peace with the Tammany Hall forces, and in 1918 the group supported others in an unsuccessful attempt to persuade him to run for governor of New York. He very much wanted to get into a military uniform, but the armistice took shape before this could materialize;[89] Wilson reportedly ordered Roosevelt to not resign.[90] With the end of World War I in November 1918, Roosevelt was in charge of demobilization, although he opposed plans to completely dismantle the Navy.

Roosevelt was sickened during the 1918 flu pandemic, but he survived.[91] In 1919, newspapers in Newport, Rhode Island, criticized Roosevelt over his handling of what came to be known as the Newport sex scandal.[92] Much more threatening was the fact that Roosevelt and his wife, then living in Washington, D.C., across the street from Attorney General Alexander Mitchell Palmer, narrowly missed becoming casualties of an anarchist's bomb that exploded at Palmer's house, which they had walked past just minutes before. Their own residence was close enough that one of the bomber's body parts landed on their doorstep.[93]

Campaign for Vice President

Cox and Roosevelt in Ohio, 1920.

The 1920 Democratic National Convention chose Roosevelt by acclamation as the vice-presidential candidate[94] with its presidential candidate, Governor James M. Cox of Ohio. Although his nomination surprised most people, Roosevelt was considered as bringing balance to the ticket as a moderate, a Wilsonian, and a prohibitionist with a famous name.[95][96] Roosevelt had just turned 38, four years younger than Theodore had been when he received the same nomination from his party. The Cox–Roosevelt ticket was defeated by Republicans Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge in the presidential election by a wide margin.[97] Roosevelt returned to New York to practice law and joined the newly organized New York Civitan Club.[98]

Polio

Rare photograph of FDR in a wheelchair, with Fala and Ruthie Bie, the daughter of caretakers at his Hyde Park estate. Photo taken by his cousin Margaret Suckley (February 1941)

While the Roosevelts were vacationing at Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada in August 1921, Roosevelt fell ill and was diagnosed with polio.[99][100] The infectious disease left him with permanent paralysis from the waist down. Following the illness, Roosevelt remained out of the public eye for several years, turning his attention away from politics and toward his legal practice and his various indoor hobbies, such as reading and stamp collecting.[101] For the rest of his life, Roosevelt refused to accept the fact that he was permanently paralyzed.[102] He tried a wide range of therapies, including hydrotherapy. In 1926, he purchased a resort at Warm Springs, Georgia, where he founded a hydrotherapy center for the treatment of polio patients; it still operates as the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation.[103] In 1938, FDR founded the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, now known as the March of Dimes.[104][105]

At the time, Roosevelt convinced many people that he was improving, which he believed to be essential prior to running for public office again.[106] He laboriously taught himself to walk short distances while wearing iron braces on his hips and legs by swiveling his torso, supporting himself with a cane.[107] He was careful never to be seen using his wheelchair in public, and great care was taken to prevent any portrayal in the press that would highlight his disability.[108] Few photographs of FDR in his wheelchair are known; they include two taken by his cousin and confidante Margaret Suckley,[109] another taken by a sailor aboard the USS Indianapolis in 1933,[110] and another published in a 1937 issue of Life magazine.[111] Film clips of the "walk" he achieved after his illness are equally rare.[112][113] He usually appeared in public standing upright, supported on one side by an aide or one of his sons. FDR used a car with specially designed hand controls that provided him with further mobility.[114]

A 2003 retrospective diagnosis of Roosevelt's paralytic illness favored Guillain–Barré syndrome rather than polio,[115] a conclusion criticized by other researchers.

Governor of New York (1929–32)

Gov. Roosevelt with his predecessor Al Smith, 1930

Roosevelt maintained contacts and mended fences with the Democratic Party during the 1920s, especially in New York. Although he initially had made his name as an opponent of New York City's Tammany Hall machine, Roosevelt moderated his stance against that group as well.[116] He helped Alfred E. Smith win the election for governor of New York in 1922, and in 1924 was a strong supporter of Smith against his cousin, Republican Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.[117] Roosevelt gave nominating speeches for Smith at the 1924 and 1928 Democratic conventions; the speech at the 1924 election marked a return to public life following his illness and convalescence.[118]

As the Democratic Party presidential nominee in the 1928 election, Smith in turn asked Roosevelt to run for governor in the state election. Roosevelt was nominated by the Democrats by acclamation.[119] While Smith lost the Presidency in a landslide, and was defeated in his home state, Roosevelt was narrowly elected governor, by a one-percent margin.[120] As a reform governor, he established a number of new social programs, and was advised by Frances Perkins and Harry Hopkins.[121]

When Roosevelt began his run for a second term In May 1930, he reiterated his doctrine from the campaign two years before: "that progressive government by its very terms, must be a living and growing thing, that the battle for it is never ending and that if we let up for one single moment or one single year, not merely do we stand still but we fall back in the march of civilization."[122] In this campaign for re-election, Roosevelt needed the good will of the Tammany Hall machine in New York City to succeed; his Republican opponent, Charles H. Tuttle, used Roosevelt's connection with Tammany Hall's corruption as an election issue. As the election approached, Roosevelt began preemptive efforts by initiating investigations of the sale of judicial offices. He was directly involved, as he had made a routine short-term court appointment of a Tammany Hall man who was alleged to have paid Tammany $30,000 for the position.[122] His Republican opponent could not overcome the public's criticism of the Republican Party for current economic distress in the Great Depression, and Roosevelt was elected to a second term by a margin of 14%.[123]

1932 presidential election

1932 electoral vote results
FDR in 1933

Roosevelt's strong base in the most populous state in the nation made him an obvious candidate for the Democratic nomination, which was hotly contested in light of incumbent Herbert Hoover's vulnerability. Al Smith was supported by some city bosses, but had lost control of the New York Democratic party to Roosevelt. Roosevelt built his own national coalition with personal allies such as newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, Irish leader Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., and California leader William Gibbs McAdoo. When Texas leader John Nance Garner announced his support of FDR, he was given the vice-presidential nomination.[124]

Breaking with tradition of the time, Roosevelt traveled to Chicago to accept the nomination in person. In his acceptance speech, Roosevelt declared, "I pledge you, I pledge myself to a new deal for the American people... This is more than a political campaign. It is a call to arms."[125] The election campaign was conducted under the shadow of the Great Depression in the United States, and the new alliances which it created. Roosevelt and the Democratic Party mobilized the expanded ranks of the poor as well as organized labor, ethnic minorities, urbanites, and Southern whites, crafting the New Deal coalition. At that time, African Americans in the South were still disfranchised, as they had been since the turn of the century. Southern states had passed a variety of requirements making voter registration more difficult, which served to exclude most blacks and many poor whites from the political system.

Economist Marriner Eccles observed that "given later developments, the campaign speeches often read like a giant misprint, in which Roosevelt and Hoover speak each other's lines."[126] Roosevelt denounced Hoover's failures to restore prosperity or halt the downward slide, and he ridiculed Hoover's huge deficits. Roosevelt campaigned on the Democratic platform advocating "immediate and drastic reductions of all public expenditures," "abolishing useless commissions and offices, consolidating departments and bureaus, and eliminating extravagances" and for a "sound currency to be maintained at all hazards." On September 23, Roosevelt made the gloomy evaluation that, "Our industrial plant is built; the problem just now is whether under existing conditions it is not overbuilt. Our last frontier has long since been reached."[127] Hoover damned that pessimism as a denial of "the promise of American life... the counsel of despair."[128] The prohibition issue solidified the "wet vote" for Roosevelt, who noted that repeal would bring in new tax revenues.

Roosevelt won 57% of the vote and carried all but six states. Historians and political scientists consider the 1932–36 elections a realigning election that created a new majority coalition for the Democrats, made up of organized labor, northern blacks, and ethnic Americans such as Italian-Americans, Polish-Americans and Jews. This transformed American politics and started what is called the "New Deal Party System" or (by political scientists) the Fifth Party System.[129]

After the election, Roosevelt refused Hoover's requests for a meeting to develop a joint program to stop the downward spiral and calm investors, claiming publicly it would tie his hands, and that Hoover had all the power to act if necessary. Unofficially, he told reporters that "it is not my baby".[130] The economy spiraled downward until the banking system began a complete nationwide shutdown as Hoover's term ended.[131] In February 1933, Roosevelt escaped an assassination attempt. Giuseppe Zangara, who expressed a "hate for all rulers," attempted to shoot Roosevelt. He shot and mortally wounded Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak who was sitting alongside Roosevelt, but his attempt to murder Roosevelt failed when an alert spectator, Lillian Cross, hit his arm with her purse and deflected the bullet.[132][133][134] Roosevelt leaned heavily on his "Brain Trust" of academic advisers, especially Raymond Moley, when designing his policies; he offered cabinet positions to numerous candidates, but some declined. The cabinet member with the strongest independent base was Cordell Hull at State. William Hartman Woodin – at Treasury – was soon replaced by the much more powerful Henry Morgenthau, Jr.[135]

Presidency (1933–1945)

Roosevelt appointed powerful men to top positions but made certain he made all the major decisions, regardless of delays, inefficiency or resentment. Analyzing the president's administrative style, historian James MacGregor Burns concludes:

The president stayed in charge of his administration...by drawing fully on his formal and informal powers as Chief Executive; by raising goals, creating momentum, inspiring a personal loyalty, getting the best out of people...by deliberately fostering among his aides a sense of competition and a clash of wills that led to disarray, heartbreak, and anger but also set off pulses of executive energy and sparks of creativity...by handing out one job to several men and several jobs to one man, thus strengthening his own position as a court of appeals, as a depository of information, and as a tool of co-ordination; by ignoring or bypassing collective decision-making agencies, such as the Cabinet...and always by persuading, flattering, juggling, improvising, reshuffling, harmonizing, conciliating, manipulating.[136]

First term (1933–1937)

Outgoing president Herbert Hoover and Roosevelt on Inauguration Day, 1933
Nothing to Fear
Sample of the Inaugural speech from FDR

Problems playing this file? See media help.

When Roosevelt was inaugurated March 4, 1933, the U.S. was at the nadir of the worst depression in its history. A quarter of the workforce was unemployed. Farmers were in deep trouble as prices fell by 60%. Industrial production had fallen by more than half since 1929. Two million people were homeless. By the evening of March 4, 32 of the 48 states – as well as the District of Columbia – had closed their banks.[137] The New York Federal Reserve Bank was unable to open on the 5th, as huge sums had been withdrawn by panicky customers in previous days.[138] Beginning with his inauguration address, Roosevelt began blaming the economic crisis on bankers and financiers, the quest for profit, and the self-interest basis of capitalism:

Primarily this is because rulers of the exchange of mankind's goods have failed through their own stubbornness and their own incompetence, have admitted their failure, and have abdicated. Practices of the unscrupulous money changers stand indicted in the court of public opinion, rejected by the hearts and minds of men. True they have tried, but their efforts have been cast in the pattern of an outworn tradition. Faced by failure of credit they have proposed only the lending of more money. Stripped of the lure of profit by which to induce our people to follow their false leadership, they have resorted to exhortations, pleading tearfully for restored confidence... The money changers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We may now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply social values more noble than mere monetary profit.[139]

Historians categorized Roosevelt's program as "relief, recovery and reform." Relief was urgently needed by tens of millions of unemployed. Recovery meant boosting the economy back to normal. Reform meant long-term fixes of what was wrong, especially with the financial and banking systems. Through Roosevelt's series of radio talks, known as fireside chats, he presented his proposals directly to the American public. In 1934, FDR paid a visit to retired Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who mused about the President: "A second class intellect. But a first class temperament."[140]

First New Deal (1933–1934)

The Roosevelt Cabinet
Office Name Term
President Franklin D. Roosevelt19331945
Vice President John Nance Garner19331941
Henry Agard Wallace19411945
Harry S. Truman1945
Secretary of State Cordell Hull19331944
Edward R. Stettinius, Jr.19441945
Secretary of Treasury William H. Woodin19331934
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.19341945
Secretary of War George H. Dern19331936
Harry Hines Woodring19361940
Henry L. Stimson19401945
Attorney General Homer Stille Cummings19331939
Frank Murphy19391940
Robert H. Jackson19401941
Francis B. Biddle19411945
Postmaster General James A. Farley19331940
Frank Comerford Walker19401945
Secretary of the Navy Claude A. Swanson19331939
Charles Edison1940
Frank Knox19401944
James V. Forrestal19441945
Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes19331945
Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace19331940
Claude R. Wickard19401945
Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper19331938
Harry L. Hopkins19391940
Jesse H. Jones19401945
Henry A. Wallace1945
Secretary of Labor Frances C. Perkins19331945

Roosevelt's "First 100 Days" concentrated on the first part of his strategy: immediate relief. From March 9 to June 16, 1933, he sent Congress a record number of bills, all of which passed easily. To propose programs, Roosevelt relied on leading Senators such as George Norris, Robert F. Wagner, and Hugo Black, as well as his Brain Trust of academic advisers. Like Hoover, he saw the Depression caused in part by people no longer spending or investing because they were afraid.

Roosevelt's inauguration on March 4, 1933 occurred in the middle of a bank panic and led to the backdrop for his famous words: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."[139] The very next day he declared a "bank holiday" and called for a special session of Congress to start March 9, at which Congress passed the Emergency Banking Act.[51] This was his first proposed step to recovery. To give Americans confidence in the banks, Roosevelt signed the Glass–Steagall Act that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to underwrite savings deposits.

Relief measures included the continuation of Hoover's major relief program for the unemployed under its new name: Federal Emergency Relief Administration. The most popular of all New Deal agencies – and Roosevelt's favorite – was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which hired 250,000 unemployed young men to work on rural local projects. Congress also gave the Federal Trade Commission broad new regulatory powers and provided mortgage relief to millions of farmers and homeowners. Roosevelt expanded a Hoover agency, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, making it a major source of financing for railroads and industry. Roosevelt made agricultural relief a high priority and set up the first Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA). The AAA tried to force higher prices for commodities by paying farmers to take land out of crops and to cut herds.[141]

Reform of the economy was the goal of the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) of 1933. It tried to end cutthroat competition by forcing industries to come up with codes that established the rules of operation for all firms within specific industries, such as minimum prices, agreements not to compete, and production restrictions. Industry leaders negotiated the codes which were approved by NIRA officials. Industry needed to raise wages as a condition for approval. Provisions encouraged unions and suspended anti-trust laws. The NIRA was found to be unconstitutional by unanimous decision of the US Supreme Court on May 27, 1935. Roosevelt opposed the decision, saying, "The fundamental purposes and principles of the NIRA are sound. To abandon them is unthinkable. It would spell the return to industrial and labor chaos."[142] In 1933, major new banking regulations were passed. In 1934, the Securities and Exchange Commission was created to regulate Wall Street, with 1932 campaign fundraiser Joseph P. Kennedy in charge.[143]

Roosevelt wanted a federal minimum wage as part of the NIRA, arguing that. "No business which depends for existence on paying less than living wages to its workers has any right to continue in this country".[144] Congress finally adopted the minimum wage in the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. It was the last major domestic reform measure of the New Deal.[145]

Recovery was pursued through "pump-priming" (that is, federal spending).[146] The NIRA included $3.3 billion of spending through the Public Works Administration to stimulate the economy, which was to be handled by Interior Secretary Harold Ickes. Roosevelt worked with Republican Senator George Norris to create the largest government-owned industrial enterprise in American history — the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) — which built dams and power stations, controlled floods, and modernized agriculture and home conditions in the poverty-stricken Tennessee Valley. The repeal of prohibition also brought in new tax revenues and helped Roosevelt keep a major campaign promise. Executive Order 6102 declared that all privately held gold of American citizens was to be sold to the US Treasury and the price raised from $20 to $35 per ounce. The goal was to counter the deflation which was paralyzing the economy.[147]

Roosevelt tried to keep his campaign promise by cutting the federal budget — including a reduction in military spending from $752 million in 1932 to $531 million in 1934 and a 40% cut in spending on veterans' benefits — by removing 500,000 veterans and widows from the pension rolls and reducing benefits for the remainder, as well as cutting the salaries of federal employees and reducing spending on research and education. But, the veterans were well organized and strongly protested; most benefits were restored or increased by 1934, but FDR vetoed their efforts to get a cash bonus.[148] The benefit cuts also did not last. In June 1933, Roosevelt restored $50 million in pension payments, and Congress added another $46 million more.[149]

Veterans groups such as the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars won their campaign to transform their benefits from payments due in 1945 to immediate cash when Congress overrode the President's veto and passed the Bonus Act in January 1936.[150][151] It pumped sums equal to 2% of the GDP into the consumer economy and had a major stimulus effect.[152]

Roosevelt also kept his promise to push for the repeal of Prohibition. On March 23, 1933, he signed the Cullen–Harrison Act, which redefined 3.2% alcohol as the maximum allowed. That act was preceded by Congressional action in the drafting and passage of the 21st Amendment, which was ratified later that year.[153]

Second New Deal (1935–1936)

Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act into law, August 14, 1935

After the 1934 Congressional elections had given Roosevelt large majorities in both houses, his administration drafted a fresh surge of New Deal legislation. These measures included the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which set up a national relief agency that employed two million family heads. At the height of WPA employment in 1938, unemployment was down from 20.6% in 1933 to only 12.5%, according to figures from Michael Darby.[154]

The Social Security Act established Social Security and promised economic security for the elderly, the poor and the sick. Senator Robert Wagner wrote the Wagner Act, which officially became the National Labor Relations Act. The act established the federal rights of workers to organize unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes.

1936 re-election handbill for Roosevelt promoting his economic policy

While the First New Deal of 1933 had broad support from most sectors, the Second New Deal challenged the business community. Conservative Democrats, led by Al Smith, fought back with the American Liberty League, savagely attacking Roosevelt and equating him with Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin.[155] But Smith overplayed his hand, and his boisterous rhetoric let Roosevelt isolate his opponents and identify them with the wealthy vested interests that opposed the New Deal, strengthening Roosevelt for the 1936 landslide.[155] By contrast, labor unions, energized by the Wagner Act, signed up millions of new members and became a major backer of Roosevelt's reelections in 1936, 1940 and 1944.[156]

Biographer James M. Burns suggests that Roosevelt's policy decisions were guided more by pragmatism than ideology, and that he "was like the general of a guerrilla army whose columns, fighting blindly in the mountains through dense ravines and thickets, suddenly converge, half by plan and half by coincidence, and debouch into the plain below."[157] Roosevelt argued that such apparently haphazard methodology was necessary. "The country needs and, unless I mistake its temper, the country demands bold, persistent experimentation," he wrote. "It is common sense to take a method and try it; if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something."[158]

Economic policies

Government spending increased from 8.0% of gross national product (GNP) under Hoover in 1932 to 10.2% of the GNP in 1936. The national debt as a percentage of the GNP had more than doubled under Hoover from 16% to 40% of the GNP in early 1933. It held steady at close to 40% as late as fall 1941, then grew rapidly during the war.[159]

Unemployment rate in the U.S. 1910–60, with the years of the Great Depression (1929–39) highlighted

Deficit spending had been recommended by some economists, most notably by John Maynard Keynes of Britain. The GNP was 34% higher in 1936 than in 1932 and 58% higher in 1940 on the eve of war. That is, the economy grew 58% from 1932 to 1940 in 8 years of peacetime, and then grew 56% from 1940 to 1945 in 5 years of wartime.[159]

Unemployment fell dramatically in Roosevelt's first term, from 25% when he took office to 14.3% in 1937. However, it increased slightly to 19.0% in 1938 ("a depression within a depression") and fell to 17.2% in 1939, and then dropped again to 14.6% in 1940 until it reached 1.9% in 1945 during World War II.[160] Total employment during Roosevelt's term expanded by 18.31 million jobs, with an average annual increase in jobs during his administration of 5.3%.[161][162] Roosevelt considered his New Deal policies as central to his legacy, and in his 1944 State of the Union Address, he advocated that Americans should think of basic economic rights as a Second Bill of Rights.

Roosevelt did not raise income taxes before World War II began; however, payroll taxes were introduced in 1937 to fund the new Social Security program. He also convinced Congress to spend more on many various programs never before seen in American history. Under the revenue pressures brought on by the depression, most states added or increased taxes, including sales as well as income taxes. Roosevelt's proposal for new taxes on corporate savings were highly controversial in 1936–37, and were rejected by Congress. During the war he pushed for even higher income tax rates for individuals (reaching a marginal tax rate of 91%) and corporations and a cap on high salaries for executives. He also issued Executive Order 9250 in October 1942, later to be rescinded by Congress, which raised the marginal tax rate for salaries exceeding $25,000 (after tax) to 100%, thereby limiting salaries to $25,000 (about $366,000 today).[163][164][165] To fund the war, Congress not only broadened the base so that almost every employee paid federal income taxes, but also introduced withholding taxes in 1943.

Conservation and the environment

Roosevelt had a lifelong interest in the environment and conservation starting with his youthful interest in forestry on his family estate. As governor and president, he launched numerous projects for conservation, in the name of protecting the environment, and providing beauty and jobs for the people. He was strengthened in his resolve by the model of his cousin Theodore Roosevelt. Although FDR was never an outdoorsman or sportsman on TR's scale, his growth of the national systems were comparable. FDR created 140 national wildlife refuges (especially for birds) and established 29 national forests and 29 national parks and monuments.[166][167] He thereby achieved the vision he had set out in 1931:

Heretofore our conservation policy has been merely to preserve as much as possible of the existing forests. Our new policy goes a step further. It will not only preserve the existing forests, but create new ones.[168]

As president, he was active in expanding, funding, and promoting the National Park and National Forest systems. He used relief agencies to upgrade the facilities. Their popularity soared, from three million visitors a year at the start of the decade, to 15.5 million in 1939.[169] His favorite agency was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which expended most of its effort on environmental projects. The CCC in a dozen years enrolled 3.4 million young men; they built 13,000 miles of trails, planted two billion trees and upgraded 125,000 miles of dirt roads. Every state had its own state parks, and Roosevelt made sure that WPA and CCC projects were set up to upgrade them as well as the national systems.[170][171]

Roosevelt heavily funded the system of dams to provide flood control, electricity, and modernization of rural communities through the Tennessee Valley Authority, as well as less famous projects transforming western rivers. He was a great dam builder, although 21st century critics would see this as the antithesis of conservation.[172]

Foreign policy (1933–1937)

The rejection of the League of Nations treaty in 1919 marked the dominance of isolationism from world organizations in American foreign policy. Despite Roosevelt's Wilsonian background, he and Secretary of State Cordell Hull acted with great care not to provoke isolationist sentiment. Roosevelt's "bombshell" message to the world monetary conference in 1933 effectively ended any major efforts by the world powers to collaborate on ending the worldwide depression, and allowed Roosevelt a free hand in economic policy.[173] Roosevelt was a lifelong free-trader and anti-imperialist. Ending European colonialism was one of his objectives.[174]

Roosevelt with Brazilian President Getúlio Vargas and other dignitaries in 1936

The main foreign policy initiative of Roosevelt's first term was the Good Neighbor Policy, which was a re-evaluation of U.S. policy towards Latin America. Since the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, this area had been seen as an American sphere of influence. American forces were withdrawn from Haiti, and new treaties with Cuba and Panama ended their status as U.S. protectorates. In December 1933, Roosevelt signed the Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States, renouncing the right to intervene unilaterally in the affairs of Latin American countries.[175]

The isolationist movement was bolstered in the early to mid-1930s by U.S. Senator Gerald Nye and others who succeeded in their effort to stop the "merchants of death" in the U.S. from selling arms abroad.[176] This effort took the form of the Neutrality Acts; the president asked for, but was refused, a provision to give him the discretion to allow the sale of arms to victims of aggression.[177] In the interim, Italy under Benito Mussolini proceeded to overcome Ethiopia, and the Italians joined Nazi Germany in supporting the General Franco and the Nationalist cause in the Spanish Civil War.[178] In 1936 Germany and Japan signed an Anti-Comintern Pact, but they never coordinated their strategies.[179] Congress passed, and the president signed, a mandatory arms embargo at a time when dictators in Europe and Asia were girding for world war.[180]

Landslide re-election, 1936

1936 electoral vote results

In the 1936 presidential election, Roosevelt campaigned on his New Deal programs against Kansas Governor Alf Landon, who accepted much of the New Deal but objected that it was hostile to business and involved too much waste. Roosevelt and Garner won 60.8% of the vote and carried every state except Maine and Vermont.[181] The New Deal Democrats won even larger majorities in Congress. Roosevelt was backed by a coalition of voters that included traditional Democrats across the country, small farmers, the "Solid South" (mostly white Democrats), Catholics, big city political machines, labor unions, northern African Americans (southern ones were still disfranchised), Jews, intellectuals and political liberals. This coalition, frequently referred to as the New Deal coalition, remained largely intact for the Democratic Party until the 1960s.[182] Roosevelt's popularity generated massive volumes of correspondence that had to be responded to. He once told his son James, "Two short sentences will generally answer any known letter."[183]

Second term (1937–1941)

In contrast to his first term, little major legislation was passed during Roosevelt's second term. There was the Housing Act of 1937, a second Agricultural Adjustment Act, and the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938, which created the minimum wage. When the economy began to deteriorate again in late 1937, Roosevelt asked Congress for $5 billion in Works Progress Administration relief and public works funding. This managed to eventually create as many as 3.3 million WPA jobs by 1938. Projects accomplished under the WPA ranged from new federal courthouses and post offices, to facilities and infrastructure for national parks, bridges and other infrastructure across the country, and architectural surveys and archaeological excavations — investments to construct facilities and preserve important resources. Beyond this, however, Roosevelt recommended to a special congressional session only a permanent national farm act, administrative reorganization and regional planning measures, which were leftovers from a regular session. According to Burns, this attempt illustrated Roosevelt's inability to decide on a basic economic program.[184]

The Supreme Court became Roosevelt's primary focus during his second term, after the court overturned many of his programs. In particular, the Court in 1935 unanimously ruled that the National Recovery Act (NRA) was an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to the president. Roosevelt stunned Congress in early 1937 by proposing a law to allow him to appoint up to six new justices, what he referred to as a "persistent infusion of new blood."[185] This "court packing" plan ran into intense political opposition from his own party, led by Vice President Garner, since it upset the separation of powers and gave the President control over the Court. Roosevelt's proposal to expand the court failed;[186] but by 1941, Roosevelt had appointed seven of the nine justices of the court, a change in membership which resulted in a court that began to ratify his policies.[187][188]

Roosevelt at first had massive support from the rapidly growing labor unions, but they split into bitterly feuding AFL and CIO factions, the latter led by John L. Lewis. Roosevelt pronounced a "plague on both your houses," but labor's disunity weakened the party in the elections from 1938 through 1946.[189]

Determined to overcome the opposition of conservative Democrats in Congress (mostly from the South), Roosevelt became involved in the 1938 Democratic primaries, actively campaigning for challengers who were more supportive of New Deal reform. His targets denounced Roosevelt for trying to take over the Democratic party and to win reelection, using the argument that they were independent. Roosevelt failed badly, managing to defeat only one target, a conservative Democrat from New York City.[190]

In the November 1938 election, Democrats lost six Senate seats and 71 House seats. Losses were concentrated among pro-New Deal Democrats. When Congress reconvened in 1939, Republicans under Senator Robert Taft formed a Conservative coalition with Southern Democrats, virtually ending Roosevelt's ability to get his domestic proposals enacted into law. The minimum wage law of 1938 was the last substantial New Deal reform act passed by Congress.[191] Following the autumn Congressional elections in 1938, Congress was now dominated by conservatives, many of whom feared that Roosevelt was "aiming at a dictatorship," according to the historian Hugh Brogan.[192] In addition, as noted by another historian, after the 1938 election increased the strength of Republicans,

"conservative Democrats held the balance of power between liberals and Republicans, and they used it to prevent completion of the structure of the Second New Deal."[193]

Roosevelt had always belonged to the more liberal wing of the Democratic Party. He sought a realignment that would solidify liberal dominance by means of landslides in 1932, 1934 and 1936. During the 1932 campaign he predicted privately, "I'll be in the White House for eight years. When those years are over, there'll be a Progressive party. It may not be Democratic, but it will be Progressive." When the third consecutive landslide in 1936 failed to produce major legislation in 1937, his recourse was to purge his conservative opponents in 1938.[194]

Foreign policy (1937–1941)

The Roosevelts with George VI and Queen Elizabeth, sailing from Washington, D.C., to Mount Vernon, Virginia on the USS Potomac during the first U.S. visit of a reigning British monarch (June 9, 1939)

The aggressive foreign policy of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler in Germany after 1933 aroused fears of a new world war. Americans wanted to keep out of it and in 1937 Congress passed an even more stringent Neutrality Act. But when Japan invaded China in 1937, public opinion strongly favored China, and Roosevelt found various ways to assist that nation.[195]

In October 1937, Roosevelt gave the Quarantine Speech aiming to contain aggressor nations. He proposed that warmongering states be treated as a public health menace and be "quarantined."[196] Meanwhile, he secretly stepped up a program to build long-range submarines that could blockade Japan.[197]

At the time of the Munich Agreement in 1938 — with the U.S. not represented — Roosevelt said the country would not join a "stop-Hitler bloc" under any circumstances (Roosevelt was widely praised for his help making the conference possible[198]). He made it quite clear that, in the event of German aggression against Czechoslovakia, the U.S. would remain neutral.[199][200] Roosevelt said in 1939 that France and Britain were America's "first line of defense" and needed American aid, but because of widespread isolationist sentiment, he reiterated the US itself would not go to war.[201] In the spring of 1939, Roosevelt allowed the French to place huge orders with the American aircraft industry on a cash-and-carry basis, as allowed by law. Most of the aircraft ordered had not arrived in France by the time of its collapse in May 1940, so Roosevelt arranged in June 1940 for French orders to be sold to the British.[202]

When World War II began in September 1939 with Germany's invasion of Poland, Roosevelt rejected the Wilsonian neutrality stance and sought ways to assist Britain and France militarily.[203] At first he gave only covert support to repeal of the arms embargo provisions of the Neutrality Act.[204] He began a regular secret correspondence with the First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill in September 1939 — the first of 1,700 letters and telegrams between them[205] — discussing ways of supporting Britain. Roosevelt forged a close personal relationship with Churchill, who became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in May 1940. In his elegy to the former president, Churchill said that "in FDR there died the greatest American friend we have ever known".[206]

His relations with Charles de Gaulle, leader of Free France, were more strained, for a long time he refused to recognize de Gaulle as the representative of France, preferring to deal with representatives of the Vichy government. Roosevelt did not recognize de Gaulle's provisional government until late 1944.[207]

In April 1940, Germany invaded Denmark and Norway, followed by invasions of the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and France in May. The German victories left Britain isolated in western Europe. Roosevelt, who was determined that Britain not be defeated, took advantage of the rapid shifts of public opinion. The fall of Paris shocked American opinion, and isolationist sentiment declined. A consensus was clear that military spending had to be dramatically expanded. There was no consensus on how much the US should risk war in helping Britain.[208]

In July 1940, FDR appointed two interventionist Republican leaders, Henry L. Stimson and Frank Knox, as Secretaries of War and the Navy, respectively. Both parties gave support to his plans for a rapid build-up of the American military, but the isolationists warned that Roosevelt would get the nation into an unnecessary war with Germany.[209] Congress authorized the nation's first peacetime draft.[210] Roosevelt used his personal charisma to build support for intervention. America should be the "Arsenal of Democracy", he told his fireside audience.[211]

Foreign trips of Roosevelt during his presidency[212]

On September 2, 1940, Roosevelt openly defied the Neutrality Acts by passing the Destroyers for Bases Agreement, which, in exchange for military base rights in the British Caribbean Islands, gave 50 WWI American destroyers to Britain. The U.S. also received free base rights in Bermuda and Newfoundland, allowing British forces to be moved to the sharper end of the war; the idea of an exchange of warships for bases such as these originated in the cabinet.[213] Hitler and Mussolini responded to the deal by joining with Japan in the Tripartite Pact.[214]

The agreement with Britain was a precursor of the March 1941 Lend-Lease agreement, which began to direct massive military and economic aid to Britain, the Republic of China, and later the Soviet Union. For foreign policy advice, Roosevelt turned to Harry Hopkins, who became his chief wartime advisor. They sought innovative ways short of going to war to help Britain, whose financial resources were exhausted by the end of 1940.[215]

Isolationist sentiment was waning in Congress when it passed the Lend-Lease Act in March 1941, which allowed the U.S. to give Britain, China, and later the Soviet Union military supplies. The legislation had hit a logjam until Senators Byrd, Byrnes and Taft added a provision subjecting it to appropriation by Congress.[216] Congress voted to commit to spend $50 billion on military supplies from 1941 to 1945. In sharp contrast to the loans of World War I, there would be no repayment after the war. Until late in 1941, Roosevelt refused Churchill's urgent requests for armed escort of ships bound for Britain, insisting on a more passive patrolling function in the western Atlantic.[217]

Educational contributions (1940)

President Roosevelt erected Franklin Delano Roosevelt High School (Hyde Park, New York) in Hyde Park, New York. The high school was rebuilt in the 1960s close to the original building, which had become Haviland Middle School. Franklin Delano Roosevelt High School was the only high school in the United States which was named by President Roosevelt. The original building and the newer high school are both still in good condition. Haviland Middle School serves as a historical reminder of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's contributions to society.

Election of 1940: Breaking with Tradition

1940 electoral vote results

The two-term tradition had been an unwritten rule (until the 22nd Amendment after Roosevelt's presidency) since George Washington declined to run for a third term in 1796. Both Ulysses S. Grant and Theodore Roosevelt were attacked for trying to obtain a third non-consecutive term. Franklin Roosevelt systematically undercut prominent Democrats who were angling for the nomination, including Vice President John Nance Garner[218] and two cabinet members, Secretary of State Cordell Hull and James Farley, Roosevelt's campaign manager in 1932 and 1936, the Postmaster General and the Democratic Party chairman. Roosevelt moved the convention to Chicago where he had strong support from the city machine (which controlled the auditorium sound system). At the convention the opposition was poorly organized, but Farley had packed the galleries. Roosevelt sent a message saying that he would not run unless he was drafted, and that the delegates were free to vote for anyone. The delegates were stunned; then the loudspeaker screamed "We want Roosevelt... The world wants Roosevelt!" The delegates went wild and he was nominated by 946 to 147 on the first ballot. The tactic employed by Roosevelt was not entirely successful, as his goal had been to be drafted by acclamation. The new vice-presidential nominee was Henry Agard Wallace, a liberal intellectual who was Secretary of Agriculture.[219]

In his campaign against Republican Wendell Willkie, Roosevelt stressed both his proven leadership experience and his intention to do everything possible to keep the United States out of war. In one of his speeches he declared to potential recruits that "you boys are not going to be sent into any foreign war."[220] He won the 1940 election with 55% of the popular vote and 38 of the 48 states, and thus winning almost 85% of the electoral vote (449 to 82).[221] A shift to the left within the Administration was shown by the naming of Henry A. Wallace as vice president in place of the conservative Texan John Nance Garner, who had become increasingly combative with Roosevelt after 1937.[222][223][224]

Third term (1941–1945)

Roosevelt tried to avoid repeating what he saw as Woodrow Wilson's mistakes in World War I.[225] He often made exactly the opposite decision. Wilson called for neutrality in thought and deed, while Roosevelt made it clear his administration strongly favored Britain and China.

Unlike the loans in World War I, the United States made large-scale grants of military and economic aid to the Allies through Lend-Lease, with little expectation of repayment. Wilson did not greatly expand war production before the declaration of war; Roosevelt did. Wilson waited for the declaration to begin a draft; Roosevelt started one in 1940. Wilson never made the United States an official ally but Roosevelt did. Wilson never met with the top Allied leaders but Roosevelt did. Wilson proclaimed independent policy, as seen in the 14 Points, while Roosevelt always had a collaborative policy with the Allies. In 1917, the United States declared war on Germany; in 1941, Roosevelt waited until the enemy attacked at Pearl Harbor. Wilson refused to collaborate with the Republicans; Roosevelt named leading Republicans to head the War Department and the Navy Department. Wilson let General John Pershing make the major military decisions; Roosevelt made the major decisions in his war including the "Europe first" strategy.[226] He rejected the idea of an armistice and demanded unconditional surrender. Roosevelt often mentioned his role in the Wilson administration, but added that he had profited more from Wilson's errors than from his successes.[227][228][229][230]

Policies

State of the Union (Four Freedoms) (January 6, 1941)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's January 6, 1941 State of the Union Address introducing the theme of the Four Freedoms (starting at 32:02)

Problems playing this file? See media help.

Roosevelt's third term was dominated by World War II. Roosevelt slowly began re-armament in 1938, although he was facing strong isolationist sentiment from leaders like Senators William Borah and Robert A. Taft. By 1940, re-armament was in high gear, with bipartisan support, partly to expand and re-equip the Army and Navy and partly to become the "Arsenal of Democracy" supporting Britain, France, China and (after June 1941), the Soviet Union.[231] As Roosevelt took a firmer stance against the Axis Powers, American isolationists (including Charles Lindbergh and America First) vehemently attacked the President as an irresponsible warmonger.[232] Roosevelt initiated FBI and Internal Revenue Service investigations of his loudest critics, although no legal actions resulted.[233] Unfazed by these criticisms and confident in the wisdom of his foreign policy initiatives, FDR continued his twin policies of preparedness and aid to the Allied coalition. On December 29, 1940, he delivered his Arsenal of Democracy fireside chat, in which he made the case for involvement in the war directly to the American people. A week later he delivered his famous Four Freedoms speech laying out the case for an American defense of basic rights throughout the world.

Roosevelt and Winston Churchill aboard HMS Prince of Wales for 1941 Atlantic Charter meeting

The homefront was subject to dynamic social changes throughout the war, though domestic issues were no longer Roosevelt's most urgent policy concern. The military buildup spurred economic growth. Unemployment fell in half from 7.7 million in spring 1940 (when the first accurate statistics were compiled) to 3.4 million in fall 1941 and fell in half again to 1.5 million in fall 1942, out of a labor force of 54 million.[lower-alpha 3] There was a growing labor shortage, accelerating the second wave of the Great Migration of African Americans, farmers and rural populations to manufacturing centers. African Americans from the South went to California and other West Coast states for new jobs in the defense industry. To pay for increased government spending, in 1941 FDR proposed that Congress enact an income tax rate of 99.5% on all income over $100,000; when the proposal failed, he issued an executive order imposing an income tax of 100% on income over $25,000, which Congress rescinded.[235]

When Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, Roosevelt agreed to extend Lend-Lease to the Soviets. Thus, Roosevelt had committed the U.S. to the Allied side with a policy of "all aid short of war."[236] Execution of the aid fell victim to foot dragging in the administration so FDR appointed a special assistant, Wayne Coy, to expedite matters.[237] Later that year, a German submarine fired on the U.S. destroyer Greer, and Roosevelt declared that the U.S. Navy would assume an escort role for Allied convoys in the Atlantic as far east as Great Britain and would fire upon German ships or submarines (U-boats) of the Kriegsmarine if they entered the U.S. Navy zone. This "shoot on sight" policy effectively declared naval war on Germany and was favored by Americans by a margin of 2-to-1.[238]

Roosevelt and Churchill conducted a highly secret bilateral meeting in Argentia, Newfoundland, and on August 14, 1941, drafted the Atlantic Charter, conceptually outlining global wartime and postwar goals. All the Allies endorsed it. This was the first of several wartime conferences;[239] Churchill and Roosevelt would meet ten more times in person.[240]

In July 1941, Roosevelt had ordered Secretary of War Henry Stimson, to begin planning for total American military involvement. The resulting "Victory Program" provided the Army's estimates necessary for the total mobilization of manpower, industry, and logistics to defeat Germany and Japan. The program also planned to dramatically increase aid to the Allied nations and to have ten million men in arms, half of whom would be ready for deployment abroad in 1943. Roosevelt was firmly committed to the Allied cause, and these plans were formulated before Japan's Attack on Pearl Harbor.[236]

Congress was debating a modification of the Neutrality Act in October 1941, when the USS Kearny, along with other ships, engaged a number of U-boats south of Iceland; the Kearny took fire and lost eleven crewmen. As a result, the amendment of the Neutrality Act to permit the arming of the merchant marine passed both houses, though by a slim margin.[241] In 1942, with the United States now in the conflict, war production increased dramatically, but fell short of the goals established by the President, due in part to manpower shortages.[242] The effort was also hindered by numerous strikes by union workers, especially in the coal mining and railroad industries, which lasted well into 1944.[243][244]

The White House became the ultimate site for labor mediation, conciliation or arbitration. One particular battle royale occurred between Vice-President Wallace, who headed the Board of Economic Warfare, and Jesse Jones, in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; both agencies assumed responsibility for acquisition of rubber supplies and came to loggerheads over funding. FDR resolved the dispute by dissolving both agencies.[245]

In 1944, the President requested that Congress enact legislation which would tax all unreasonable profits, both corporate and individual, and thereby support his declared need for over $10 billion in revenue for the war and other government measures. The Congress passed a revenue bill raising $2 billion, which FDR vetoed, though Congress in turn overrode him.[246]

Pearl Harbor and declarations of war

Roosevelt signing declaration of war against Japan (left) on December 8 and against Germany (right) on December 11, 1941

When Japan occupied northern French Indochina in late 1940, FDR authorized increased aid to the Republic of China, a policy that won widespread popular support. In July 1941, after Japan occupied the remainder of Indo-China, he cut off the sale of oil to Japan, which thus lost more than 95 percent of its oil supply. Roosevelt continued negotiations with the Japanese government, primarily through Secretary Hull. Japan Premier Fumimaro Konoye desired a summit conference with FDR which the US rejected. Konoye was replaced with Minister of War Hideki Tojo. Meanwhile, Roosevelt started sending long-range B-17 bombers to the Philippines to deter Japan.[247]

FDR felt that an attack by the Japanese was probable – most likely in the Dutch East Indies or Thailand.[248] On December 4, 1941, The Chicago Tribune published the complete text of "Rainbow Five", a top-secret war plan drawn up by the War Department. It dealt chiefly with mobilization issues, calling for a 10-million-man army.[249] A majority of scholars have rejected the conspiracy theories that Roosevelt, or any other high government officials, knew in advance about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.[250] The Japanese had kept their secrets closely guarded. Senior American officials were aware that war was imminent, but they did not expect an attack on Pearl Harbor.[251]

On the morning of December 7, 1941, the Japanese struck the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor with a surprise attack, knocking out the main American battleship fleet and killing 2,403 American servicemen and civilians. Roosevelt called for war in his famous "Infamy Speech" to Congress, in which he said: "Yesterday, December 7, 1941 — a date which will live in infamy — the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan."

In 1942 Roosevelt set up a new military command structure with Admiral Ernest J. King as Chief of Naval Operations in complete control of the Navy and Marines; General George C. Marshall in charge of the Army and in nominal control of the Air Force, which in practice was commanded by General Hap Arnold. Roosevelt formed a new body, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which made the final decisions on American military strategy.[252] The Joint Chiefs was a White House agency and was chaired by Admiral William D. Leahy. When dealing with Europe, the Joint Chiefs met with their British counterparts and formed the Combined Chiefs of Staff.[253] Unlike the political leaders of the other major powers, Roosevelt rarely overrode his military advisors.[254]

His civilian appointees handled the draft and procurement of men and equipment, but no civilians – not even the secretaries of War or Navy, had a voice in strategy.[lower-alpha 4] Roosevelt avoided the State Department and conducted high level diplomacy through his aides, especially Harry Hopkins. Since Hopkins also controlled $50 billion in Lend Lease funds given to the Allies, they paid attention to him.[255]

War plans

After the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor, antiwar sentiment in the United States largely evaporated overnight. On December 11, 1941, Hitler and Mussolini declared war on the United States, which responded in kind.[256] Roosevelt and his military advisers implemented a war strategy with the objectives of halting the German advances into the Soviet Union and into North Africa, launching an invasion of western Europe with the aim of crushing Nazi Germany between two fronts, and saving China and defeating Japan. Public opinion, however, gave priority to the destruction of Japan, so American forces were sent chiefly to the Pacific in 1942.[257]

In the opening weeks of the war, Japan had conquered the Philippines, and the British and Dutch colonies in Southeast Asia, capturing Singapore in February 1942. Furthermore, Japan cut off the overland supply route to China.

Roosevelt met with Churchill in late December and planned a broad informal alliance among the U.S., Britain, China and the Soviet Union. This included Churchill's initial plan to invade North Africa (called Operation Gymnast) and the primary plan of the U.S. generals for a western Europe invasion, focused directly on Germany (Operation Sledgehammer). An agreement was also reached for a centralized command and offensive in the Pacific theater called ABDA (American, British, Dutch, Australian) to save China and defeat Japan. Nevertheless, the Atlantic First strategy was intact, to Churchill's great satisfaction. On New Year's Day 1942, Churchill and FDR issued the "Declaration by United Nations", representing 26 countries in opposition to the Tripartite Pact of Germany, Italy and Japan.[258]

Internment of Germans, Italians and Japanese

When the war began, the danger of a Japanese attack on the west coast led to growing pressure to move people of Japanese descent away from the coastal region. This pressure grew due to fears of terrorism, espionage, and/or sabotage; it was also related to anti-Japanese competition and discrimination. On February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which relocated hundreds of thousands of the "Issei" (first generation of Japanese immigrants who did not have U.S. citizenship) and their children, "Nisei" (who had dual citizenship). They were forced to give up their properties and businesses, and transported to hastily built camps in interior, harsh locations.

After both Hitler and Fascist Italy declared war on the United States in December 1941, many German and Italian citizens who had not taken out American citizenship were arrested or placed into internment camps.[259]

War strategy

Roosevelt and Churchill at the Casablanca Conference (January 1943)
Chiang Kai-shek, Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill at the Cairo Conference (December 1943)

The "Big Three" of Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin, together with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, cooperated informally on a plan in which American and British troops concentrated in the West; Soviet troops fought on the Eastern front; and Chinese, British and American troops fought in Asia and the Pacific. The Allies formulated strategy in a series of high-profile conferences as well as contact through diplomatic and military channels. Roosevelt guaranteed that the U.S. would be the "Arsenal of Democracy" by shipping $50 billion of Lend Lease supplies, primarily to Britain and to the USSR, China and other Allies. Roosevelt coined the term "Four Policemen" to refer this "Big Four" Allied powers of World War II, the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and China.[260][261]

In October 1942, the President was advised that military resources were desperately needed at Guadalcanal to prevent overrunning by the Japanese. FDR heeded the advice, redirected armaments and the Japanese Pacific offensive was stalled.[262]

The Allies undertook the invasions of French Morocco and Algeria (Operation Torch) in November 1942. FDR very much desired the assault be initiated before election day, but did not order it. FDR and Churchill had another war conference in Casablanca in January 1943; Stalin declined an invitation. The Allies agreed strategically that the Mediterranean focus be continued, with the cross-channel invasion coming later, followed by concentration of efforts in the Pacific.[263] Roosevelt also championed General Henri Giraud as leader of Free France against General Charles de Gaulle.[207] Hitler reinforced his military in North Africa, with the result that the Allied efforts there suffered a temporary setback; Allied attempts to counterbalance this were successful, but resulted in war supplies to the USSR being delayed, as well as the second war front.[264] Later, their assault pursued into Sicily (Operation Husky) followed in July 1943, and of Italy (Operation Avalanche) in September 1943. In 1943, it was apparent to FDR that Stalin, while bearing the brunt of Germany's offensive, had not had sufficient opportunity to participate in war conferences. The President made a concerted effort to arrange a one-on-one meeting with Stalin, in Fairbanks. However, when Stalin learned that Roosevelt and Churchill had postponed the cross-channel invasion a second time, he cancelled.[265] The strategic bombing campaign was escalated in 1944, pulverizing all major German cities and cutting off oil supplies. It was a 50–50 British-American operation. Roosevelt picked Dwight D. Eisenhower, and not George Marshall, to head the Allied cross-channel invasion, Operation Overlord that began on D-Day, June 6, 1944. Some of the most costly battles of the war ensued after the invasion, and the Allies were blocked on the German border in the "Battle of the Bulge" in December 1944. When Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, Allied forces were closing in on Berlin.

Meanwhile, in the Pacific, the Japanese advance reached its maximum extent by June 1942, when the U.S. Navy scored a decisive victory at the Battle of Midway. American and Australian forces then began a slow and costly progress called island hopping or leapfrogging through the Pacific Islands, with the objective of gaining bases from which strategic airpower could be brought to bear on Japan and from which Japan could ultimately be invaded. In contrast to Hitler, Roosevelt took no direct part in the tactical naval operations, though he approved strategic decisions.[266] FDR gave way in part to insistent demands from the public and Congress that more effort be devoted against Japan; he always insisted on Germany first.

Post-war planning

Churchill, FDR, and Stalin at Yalta, two months before Roosevelt's death

By late 1943, it was apparent that the Allies would ultimately defeat the enemy, so it became increasingly important to make high-level political decisions about the course of the war and the postwar future of Europe. Roosevelt met with Churchill and the Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek at the Cairo Conference in November 1943, and then went to the Tehran Conference to confer with Churchill and Stalin. While Churchill warned of potential domination by a Stalin dictatorship over eastern Europe, Roosevelt responded with a statement summarizing his rationale for relations with Stalin: "I just have a hunch that Stalin is not that kind of a man. [...] I think that if I give him everything I possibly can and ask for nothing from him in return, noblesse oblige, he won't try to annex anything and will work with me for a world of democracy and peace."[267] At the Tehran Conference, Roosevelt and Churchill discussed plans for a postwar international organization. For his part, Stalin insisted on redrawing the frontiers of Poland. Stalin supported Roosevelt's plan for the United Nations and promised to enter the war against Japan 90 days after Germany was defeated.

By the beginning of 1945, however, with the Allied armies advancing into Germany and the Soviets in control of Poland, the postwar issues came into the open. In February, Roosevelt met with Churchill at Malta[268] and traveled to Yalta, in Crimea, to meet again with Stalin and Churchill. While Roosevelt maintained his confidence that Stalin would keep his Yalta promises regarding free elections in eastern Europe, one month after Yalta ended, Roosevelt's Ambassador to the USSR, Averell Harriman, cabled Roosevelt that "we must come clearly to realize that the Soviet program is the establishment of totalitarianism, ending personal liberty and democracy as we know it."[269] Two days later, Roosevelt began to admit that his view of Stalin had been excessively optimistic and that "Averell is right."[269]

Declining health

Roosevelt, a chain-smoker throughout his entire adult life,[270][271] had been in declining physical health since at least 1940, and by 1944 he was noticeably fatigued. In March 1944, shortly after his 62nd birthday, he underwent testing at Bethesda Hospital and was found to have high blood pressure, atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease causing angina pectoris, and congestive heart failure.[272][273][274]

Hospital physicians and two outside specialists ordered Roosevelt to rest. His personal physician, Admiral Ross McIntire, created a daily schedule that banned business guests for lunch and incorporated two hours of rest each day. During the 1944 re-election campaign, McIntire denied several times that Roosevelt's health was poor; on October 12, for example, he announced that "The President's health is perfectly OK. There are absolutely no organic difficulties at all."[275] Prior to the election, Roosevelt may have used his authority over the Office of Censorship to quash press reports of his declining physical health.[276]

Roosevelt, aware that most publishers were opposed to him, had the Army issue a decree in 1943 that blocked all publishers and editors from visits to combat areas.[277]

Election of 1944

Democratic campaign poster of 1944 with Roosevelt and Truman
1944 electoral vote results

Party leaders insisted that Roosevelt drop Henry A. Wallace, who had been erratic as vice president. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, a top FDR aide, was considered ineligible because he had left the Catholic Church and many Catholic voters would not vote for him. Roosevelt replaced Wallace with Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman, best known for his battle against corruption and inefficiency in wartime spending. The Republicans nominated Thomas E. Dewey, the governor of New York who had a reputation as a liberal in his party. The opposition lambasted FDR and his administration for domestic corruption, bureaucratic inefficiency, tolerance of Communism, and military blunders. Labor unions, which had grown rapidly in the war, threw their all-out support behind Roosevelt. Roosevelt and Truman won the 1944 election by a comfortable margin, defeating Dewey and his running mate John W. Bricker with 53.4% of the popular vote and 432 out of the 531 electoral votes.[278] The President campaigned in favor of a strong United Nations, so his victory symbolized support for the nation's future participation in the international community. Due to the President's declining health, the small-scale fourth inauguration on January 20, 1945, was held on the White House lawn.[279]

Fourth term and death (1945)

Last days, death and memorial

Roosevelt meets with King Abdul-Aziz of Saudi Arabia on board the USS Quincy at the Great Bitter Lake (February 14, 1945)
Last photograph of Roosevelt, taken April 11, 1945, the day before his death
Roosevelt's funeral procession in Washington, D.C., watched by 300,000 spectators (April 14, 1945)
FDR gravesite at Hyde Park

The President left the Yalta Conference on February 12, 1945, flew to Egypt and boarded the USS Quincy operating on the Great Bitter Lake near the Suez Canal. Aboard Quincy the next day, he met with Farouk I, king of Egypt, and Haile Selassie, emperor of Ethiopia. On February 14, he held a historic meeting with King Abdulaziz, the founder of Saudi Arabia, a meeting some historians believe holds profound significance in U.S.–Saudi relations even today.[280] After a final meeting between Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill, Quincy steamed for Algiers, arriving February 18, at which time Roosevelt conferred with American ambassadors to Britain, France and Italy.[281] At Yalta, Lord Moran (Winston Churchill's physician) commented on Roosevelt's ill health, saying that he was a dying man.[282]

When Roosevelt returned to the United States, he addressed Congress on March 1 about the Yalta Conference,[283] and many were shocked to see how old, thin and frail he looked. He spoke while seated in the well of the House, an unprecedented concession to his physical incapacity. Roosevelt opened his speech by saying, "I hope that you will pardon me for this unusual posture of sitting down during the presentation of what I want to say, but... it makes it a lot easier for me not to have to carry about ten pounds of steel around on the bottom of my legs." Still in full command mentally, he firmly stated "The Crimean Conference ought to spell the end of a system of unilateral action, the exclusive alliances, the spheres of influence, the balances of power, and all the other expedients that have been tried for centuries—and have always failed. We propose to substitute for all these, a universal organization in which all peace-loving nations will finally have a chance to join."[284]

During March 1945, he sent strongly worded messages to Stalin accusing him of breaking his Yalta commitments over Poland, Germany, prisoners of war and other issues. When Stalin accused the western Allies of plotting behind his back a separate peace with Hitler, Roosevelt replied: "I cannot avoid a feeling of bitter resentment towards your informers, whoever they are, for such vile misrepresentations of my actions or those of my trusted subordinates."[285]

In his later years at the White House, Roosevelt was increasingly overworked and his daughter Anna had moved in to provide her father companionship and support. Anna had also arranged for her father to meet with his former mistress, the now widowed Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd. Shoumatoff, who maintained close friendships with both Roosevelt and Mercer, rushed Mercer away to avoid negative publicity and implications of infidelity.

On March 29, 1945, Roosevelt went to the Little White House at Warm Springs, Georgia, to rest before his anticipated appearance at the founding conference of the United Nations. On the afternoon of April 12, Roosevelt said, "I have a terrific pain in the back of my head." He then slumped forward in his chair, unconscious, and was carried into his bedroom. The president's attending cardiologist, Dr. Howard Bruenn, diagnosed the medical emergency as a massive cerebral hemorrhage.[286] At 3:35 p.m. that day, Roosevelt died. As Allen Drury later said, "so ended an era, and so began another." After Roosevelt's death, an editorial by The New York Times declared, "Men will thank God on their knees a hundred years from now that Franklin D. Roosevelt was in the White House".[287]

At the time he collapsed, Roosevelt had been sitting for a portrait painting by the artist Elizabeth Shoumatoff; the painting would later become known as the famous Unfinished Portrait of FDR.

On the morning of April 13, Roosevelt's body was placed in a flag-draped coffin and loaded onto the presidential train for the trip back to Washington. Along the route, thousands flocked to the tracks to pay their respects. After a White House funeral on April 14, Roosevelt was transported by train from Washington, D.C. to his place of birth at Hyde Park. As was his wish, Roosevelt was buried on April 15 in the Rose Garden of the Springwood estate, the Roosevelt family home in Hyde Park. Eleanor would be interred next to him when she died seventeen years later in November 1962.

Roosevelt's declining physical health had been kept secret from the general public. His death was met with shock and grief[288] across the U.S. and around the world.

The war in Europe ended on May 8, less than a month after his death. New President Harry S. Truman dedicated Victory in Europe Day and its celebrations to Roosevelt's memory, and kept the flags across the U.S. at half-staff for the remainder of the 30-day mourning period, saying that his only wish was "that Franklin D. Roosevelt had lived to witness this day."[289]

Supreme Court appointments 1933–1945

Supreme Court Appointments by President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Position Name Term
Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone19411946
Associate Justice Hugo Black19371971
Stanley Forman Reed19381957
Felix Frankfurter19391962
William O. Douglas19391975
Frank Murphy19401949
James F. Byrnes19411942
Robert H. Jackson19411954
Wiley Blount Rutledge19431949

President Roosevelt appointed eight Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States, more than any other President except George Washington, who appointed ten. By 1941, eight of the nine Justices were Roosevelt appointees. Roosevelt also elevated Harlan Fiske Stone from the position of Associate Justice to Chief Justice.

Civil rights

Roosevelt was a hero to major minority groups, especially African Americans, Catholics, and Jews, and was highly successful in attracting large majorities of these voters into his New Deal coalition.[290] He won strong support from Chinese Americans and Filipino Americans, but not Japanese Americans, as he was responsible for their losses due to internship in concentration camps during the war.[291] Roosevelt's understanding and awareness of problems in the world of the American Indians was questioned during the Hopi Hearings which were held in 1955.

African Americans and Native Americans fared well in two New Deal relief programs, the Civilian Conservation Corps and the Indian Reorganization Act, respectively. Sitkoff reported that the WPA "provided an economic floor for the whole black community in the 1930s, rivaling both agriculture and domestic service as the chief source" of income.[292]

Eleanor Roosevelt and Mary McLeod Bethune, a member of Roosevelt's Black Cabinet (a key advisory group on race relations)

Another significant change was establishment in 1941 of the Fair Employment Practices Committee, to implement Executive Order 8802 prohibiting racial and religious discrimination in employment among defense contractors. This was the first national program directed against employment discrimination. African Americans who gained defense industry jobs in the 1940s shared in the higher wages; in the 1950s they had gained in relative economic position, about 14% higher than other blacks who were not in such industries. Their moves into manufacturing positions were critical to their success.[293]

Roosevelt needed the support of the powerful white Southern Democrats for his New Deal programs, and blacks were still disenfranchised in the South. He decided against pushing for federal anti-lynching legislation. It was not likely to pass and the political fight might threaten his ability to pass his highest priority programs—though he did denounce lynchings as "a vile form of collective murder".[294] The frequency of lynchings had declined since the early decades of the century, in part due to the African Americans' Great Migration out of the South; millions were still leaving it behind.

Historian Kevin J. McMahon claims that strides were made for the civil rights of African Americans. In Roosevelt's Justice Department, the Civil Rights Section worked closely with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Roosevelt worked with other civil rights groups on cases dealing with police brutality, lynching, and voting rights abuses.[295]

Beginning in the 1960s, FDR was charged[296][297][298] with not acting decisively enough to prevent or stop the Holocaust.[299]

The issue of desegregating the armed forces did not arise, but in 1940 Roosevelt appointed former federal judge William H. Hastie, an African American, to be a civilian aide to Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson.[300] On the home front on June 25, 1941, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 8802, forbidding discrimination on account of "race, creed, color, or national origin" in the hiring of workers in defense related industries.[301] This was a precursor to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to come decades later.[302]

However, enemy aliens and people of Japanese ancestry were taken under control. On February 19, 1942, Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 that applied to everyone classified as an "enemy alien", including people who had dual citizenship living in designated high-risk areas that covered most of the cities on the West Coast.[303] Roosevelt personally made the decision regarding 120,000 Japanese citizens and dual citizens forced to leave the West Coast. From 1942 to 1945, they lived in internment camps inland. Those outside the West Coast, and in Hawaii were not relocated.[304]

Criticism

During his presidency, and continuing to a lesser extent today, there has been much criticism of Roosevelt, some of it intense. Critics have questioned not only his policies, positions, and the consolidation of power that occurred due to his responses to the crises of the Depression and World War II, but also his breaking with tradition by running for a third term as president.[305]

By the middle of his second term, much criticism of Roosevelt centered on fears that he was heading toward a dictatorship, by attempting to seize control of the Supreme Court in the court-packing incident of 1937, by attempting to eliminate dissent within the Democratic party in the South during the 1938 elections, and by breaking the tradition established by George Washington of not seeking a third term when he again ran for re-election in 1940. As two historians explain, "In 1940, with the two-term issue as a weapon, anti-New Dealers...argued that the time had come to disarm the 'dictator' and to dismantle the machinery."[306]

As president, Roosevelt was hit from both the right and the left. He came under attack for his supposed anti-business policies, for being a "warmonger", for being a "Fascist" and for being too friendly to Joseph Stalin. Long after his death, new lines of attack criticized his policies regarding helping the Jews of Europe,[307] incarcerating the Japanese on the West Coast,[308] and opposing anti-lynching legislation.[309]

Legacy

FDR Memorial in Grosvenor Square, London (1948)
The Four Freedoms engraved on a wall at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C. (1997)
Dime (1989) with a portrait of Roosevelt; popularly known as Roosevelt Dime

A majority of polls rank Roosevelt as the second or third greatest president.[310][311][312] Roosevelt is the sixth most admired person from the 20th century by U.S. citizens, according to Gallup.[313]

The rapid expansion of government programs that occurred during Roosevelt's term redefined the role of the government in the United States, and Roosevelt's advocacy of government social programs was instrumental in redefining liberalism for coming generations.[314]

Roosevelt firmly established the United States' leadership role on the world stage, with his role in shaping and financing World War II. His isolationist critics faded away, and even the Republicans joined in his overall policies.[315] After his death, his widow, Eleanor, continued to be a forceful presence in US and world politics, serving as delegate to the conference which established the United Nations and championing civil rights and liberalism generally. Many members of his administration played leading roles in the administrations of Truman, Kennedy and Johnson, each of whom embraced Roosevelt's political legacy.[316] Reflecting on Roosevelt's presidency, "which brought the United States through the Great Depression and World War II to a prosperous future", said FDR's biographer Jean Edward Smith in 2007, "He lifted himself from a wheelchair to lift the nation from its knees."[317]

Roosevelt's home in Hyde Park is now a National Historic Site and home to his Presidential library. His retreat at Warm Springs, Georgia is a museum operated by the state of Georgia. His summer retreat on Campobello Island is maintained by the governments of both Canada and the United States as Roosevelt Campobello International Park; the island is accessible by way of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Bridge.

Washington D.C. hosts two memorials to the former president. The largest, the 7.50-acre Roosevelt Memorial, is located next to the Jefferson Memorial on the Tidal Basin and was dedicated by Bill Clinton in 1997.[318] A much more modest memorial, a block of marble in front of the National Archives building, was erected in 1965.[319]

Roosevelt's leadership in the March of Dimes is one reason he is commemorated on the American dime.[320][321]

Roosevelt was honored by the United States Postal Service with a Prominent Americans seriespostage stamp, issue of 1966. He also appears on several other U.S. Postage stamps.[322] Roosevelt was a devoted stamp collector from the age of ten, spending some time almost every day with his collection of 1.25 million stamps.[101] As president, government agencies sent Roosevelt unusual stamps they received in the mail, and the hobby gave him an unusually thorough knowledge of world geography which benefited him during the war. After his death, the collection was sold for $250,000. Among the items was a group of envelopes Roosevelt saved that he received as president; those with compliments were addressed "To the Greatest Man in the World" and "God's Gift to the U.S.A.," while less favorable letters arrived in envelopes labeled "F.D. Russianvelt, President of U.S.A., C.I.O.," "Benedict Arnold 2nd," and "Rattlesnake Roosevelt."[323]

Roosevelt is the only President of the United States to serve more than two terms in office; in response to this, the 22nd Amendment limiting Presidential terms was passed by Congress in 1947 and ratified by the states in 1951.[324]

Roosevelt was also widely beloved for his role in repealing Prohibition.[153]

See also

FDR Pearl Harbor speech
Speech given before Joint Session of Congress in entirety. (3.1 MB, ogg/Vorbis format).

"A date which will live in infamy"
Section of Pearl Harbor speech with famous phrase. (168 KB, ogg/Vorbis format).

Problems playing these files? See media help.

Notes

  1. Roosevelt is an Anglicized form of the Dutch surname 'Van Rosevelt' or 'Van Rosenvelt', meaning "of the field of roses".[6] Although some use an Anglicized spelling pronunciation of /ˈrzəvɛlt/, that is, with the vowel of ruse, FDR used [ˈroʊzəvəlt], with the vowel of rose
  2. It was common for boys to wear what was considered "gender-neutral" clothing, thus boys wore dresses up until they were 6 or 7.[9]
  3. WPA workers were counted as unemployed.[234]
  4. Secretary of War Stimson did control decisions about building and the use of the atomic bomb.

References

  1. Abate, Frank R. (1999). The Oxford Desk Dictionary of People and Places. Oxford University Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0-19-513872-6.
  2. President Franklin Roosevelt 1933 Inauguration. C-SPAN. January 14, 2009. Retrieved July 24, 2017 via YouTube.
  3. Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr. (Summer 1997). "Ranking the Presidents: From Washington to Clinton". Political Science Quarterly. 112 (2): 179–90. JSTOR 2657937. doi:10.2307/2657937.
  4. Siracusa, Joseph M.; Coleman, David G. (2002). Depression to Cold War: A History of America from Herbert Hoover to Ronald Reagan. Praeger. p. 22.
  5. Tobin, James (2013). The Man He Became: How FDR Defied Polio to Win the Presidency. Simon and Schuster. pp. 4–7. ISBN 978-1-4516-9867-1.
  6. "Roosevelt – Surname Meaning, Origin for the Surname Roosevelt Genealogy". The New York Times. Retrieved November 23, 2007.
  7. 1 2 3 Burns 1956, p. 7.
  8. Black 2005, pp. 4–5, 9–10.
  9. Maglaty, Jeanne (April 7, 2011). "When Did Girls Start Wearing Pink?". Smithsonian.com.
  10. 1 2 "Roosevelt Genealogy". Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Archived from the original on December 20, 2012. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  11. Person. "Sara Delano". The Peerage. p. 13944.
  12. "Roosevelt Facts and Figures". Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved December 20, 2012.
  13. Gunther 1950, pp. 158–59.
  14. "Franklin D. Roosevelt Biography". Encyclopedia of World Biography.
  15. Gunther 1950, p. 168.
  16. Burns 1956, p. 4.
  17. Lash 1971, p. 111.
  18. Freedman, Russel (1990). Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT. New York: Clarion Books. pp. 8–9.
  19. Smith 2007, p. 20.
  20. Gunther 1950, p. 169.
  21. Gunther 1950, p. 170.
  22. 1 2 Marrin, Albert (2015). FDR and the American Crisis. Random House Children's Books. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-385-75362-3.
  23. Smith 2007, p. 110.
  24. Black 2005, p. 21.
  25. Burns 1956, p. 16.
  26. Gunther 1950, p. 174.
  27. Smith 2007, p. 28.
  28. Gunther 1950, pp. 172–73, 202.
  29. Gunther 1950, p. 351.
  30. Burg, David F. (2005). The Great Depression. Eyewitness History. Facts On File. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-8160-5709-2.
  31. Gunther 1950, p. 172.
  32. Smith 2007, p. 30.
  33. Burns 1956, pp. 18, 20.
  34. "Family of Wealth Gave Advantages". The New York Times. April 15, 1945. Retrieved December 20, 2012.
  35. Gunther 1950, p. 176.
  36. Smith 2007, pp. 31–32.
  37. Gunther 1950, p. 175.
  38. Burns 1956, p. 24.
  39. Gunther 1950, p. 177.
  40. "1884–1920: Becoming a Roosevelt". The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project. George Washington University. Archived from the original on November 24, 2012. Retrieved November 24, 2012.
  41. "Question: How was ER related to FDR?". The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers. NPS. Archived from the original on December 4, 2002. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  42. 1 2 Burns 1956, p. 26.
  43. "Obama joins list of seven presidents with Harvard degrees". Harvard Gazette. November 6, 2008.
  44. 1 2 Burns 1956, p. 28.
  45. Kelly, Erin (September 25, 2008). "Presidents Roosevelt Awarded Posthumous J.D.s" (Press release). Columbia Law School. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
  46. "Masonic Presidents". Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. Retrieved May 6, 2009.
  47. A Brief History of Holland Lodge No. 8, Holland Lodge No. 8, retrieved December 13, 2016
  48. Gunther 1950, pp. 181–83.
  49. "President Roosevelt Gives The Bride Away; His Niece Weds His Cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Ceremony At Parish Home: The Bride, Miss Eleanor Roosevelt, the Daughter of President's Only Brother". The New York Times. March 18, 1905. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
  50. Burns 1956, p. 27.
  51. 1 2 McJimsey, George T. (2001). Documentary History of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidency: The bank holiday and the emergency banking act, March 1933. University Publications of America. p. xxviii. ISBN 978-1-55655-780-4.
  52. Burns 1956, pp. 77–79.
  53. Winkler 2006, pp. 19–20.
  54. Panchyk, Richard (2007). Franklin Delano Roosevelt for Kids: His Life and Times with 21 Activities. Chicago Review Press. p. 20. ISBN 9781613740439.
  55. Smith 2007, p. 153.
  56. 1 2 Smith 2007, p. 160.
  57. Winkler 2006, pp. 28, 38, 48–49.
  58. McGrath, Charles (April 20, 2008). "No End of the Affair". The New York Times.
  59. "Lucy Page Mercer Rutherfurd". Eleanor Roosevelt Papers. Archived from the original on March 4, 2010. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  60. Smith 2007, p. 163.
  61. 1 2 Winkler 2006, pp. 202–03.
  62. Tully 2005, p. 340.
  63. Goodwin 1995, p. 153.
  64. Rowley 2010, p. 254.
  65. Winkler 2006, p. 38.
  66. Gunther 1950, p. 195.
  67. Roberts, Roxanne (March 19, 1989). "It's Just a Woof Over Their Heads; At the White House, Canine Carryings-On". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 5, 2008 via pqasb.pqarchiver.com.
  68. Gunther 1950, pp. 202–03.
  69. 1 2 Burns 1956, p. 34.
  70. Burns 1956, p. 40.
  71. Gunther 1950, pp. 203–05.
  72. Gunther 1950, pp. 205–206.
  73. Burns 1956, pp. 44–46.
  74. Burns 1956, p. 43.
  75. Burns 1956, p. 49.
  76. Smith 2007, pp. 51–98.
  77. Burns 1956, p. 51.
  78. Gunther 1950, p. 209.
  79. Underwood, Jeffery S. (1991). The Wings of Democracy: The Influence of Air Power on the Roosevelt Administration, 1933-1941. Texas A&M University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-89096-388-3.
  80. Hurley, Alfred F. (1975). Billy Mitchell, Crusader for Air Power. Indiana University Press. p. 47. ISBN 0-253-20180-2.
  81. Burns 1956, p. 52.
  82. Gunther 1950, p. 212.
  83. Gunther 1950, pp. 206, 213, 262.
  84. Burns 1956, p. 56.
  85. Burns 1956, pp. 57, 60.
  86. Burns 1956, p. 62.
  87. Smith 2007, p. 143.
  88. Smith 2007, p. 158.
  89. Burns 1956, p. 64.
  90. Gunther 1950, pp. 214–15.
  91. Collier 1974.
  92. Cook 1992, pp. 267–71.
  93. Brands 2009, p. 134.
  94. Burns 1956, p. 72.
  95. Burns 1956, p. 73.
  96. Gunther 1950, pp. 215–16.
  97. Burns 1956, p. 74.
  98. "Civitans Organize Here". The New York Times. June 16, 1922. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
  99. "F. D. Roosevelt Ill of Poliomyelitis". The New York Times. September 16, 1921. Retrieved September 24, 2015.
  100. Ward & Burns 2014, p. 236.
  101. 1 2 Clough, G. Wayne (November 2009). "From the Castle – FDR's Stamps". Smithsonian.
  102. Burns 1956, p. 87.
  103. Burns 1956, p. 88.
  104. Smith 2007, p. 217.
  105. Baghdady, Georgette; Maddock, Joanne M. (Spring 2008). "Marching to a Different Mission". Stanford Social Innovation Review: 60–65. Retrieved September 24, 2015. (Subscription required (help)).
  106. Rowley 2010, p. 125.
  107. Rowley 2010, p. 120.
  108. Ward & Burns 2014, p. 332.
  109. Ireland, Barbara (September 7, 2007). "At the Home of FDR's Secret Friend". The New York Times.
  110. Kelly, Jim (March 18, 2012). "A "new" picture of FDR in a wheelchair. USS Indianapolis 1933.". Indianapolis Morning Call. Allentown, Pennsylvania. p. 1. Retrieved May 26, 2015.
  111. Ward & Burns 2014, pp. 332–33.
  112. American Experience (excerpt). PBS. Retrieved August 28, 2011 via YouTube.
  113. "Rare Footage Shows FDR Walking at Baseball Game". Time. Retrieved September 6, 2014.
  114. "Exhibits". Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  115. Goldman, Armond S.; Schmalstieg, Elisabeth J.; Freeman, Daniel H., Jr.; Goldman, Daniel A.; Schmalstieg, Frank C., Jr. (November 2003). "What was the cause of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's paralytic illness?" (PDF). Journal of Medical Biography. 11 (4): 232–40. PMID 14562158. doi:10.1177/096777200301100412.
  116. Burns 1956, p. 93.
  117. Burns 1956, pp. 91–96.
  118. Morgan 1985, pp. 267, 269–72, 286–87.
  119. Burns 1956, p. 100.
  120. Burns 1956, p. 101.
  121. Smith 2007, pp. 238–42.
  122. 1 2 Burns 1956, pp. 119–20.
  123. Burns 1956, p. 121.
  124. Smith 2007, pp. 272–74.
  125. Burns 1956, p. 139.
  126. Kennedy 1999, p. 102.
  127. Roosevelt, Franklin Delano (September 23, 1932). "Commonwealth Club Address". Retrieved May 4, 2011.
  128. Collins 2002, p. 5.
  129. Sternsher, Bernard (Summer 1975), "The Emergence of the New Deal Party System: A Problem in Historical Analysis of Voter Behavior", Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 6 (1): 127–49, JSTOR 202828, doi:10.2307/202828
  130. Burns 1956, p. 146.
  131. Burns 1956, p. 148.
  132. "Celebrated Career" (Google news). The Montreal Gazette. AP. April 13, 1945.
  133. Burns 1956, p. 147.
  134. Davidson, Amy (May 5, 2012). "The FDR New Yorker cover that never ran". The New Yorker.
  135. Burns 1956, p. 172.
  136. Burns 1970, pp. 347–48.
  137. Alter 2006, p. 190.
  138. Kennedy, Susan Estabrook (March 13, 1933). "Bottom: The Banking Crisis of 1933". Time. Retrieved March 2, 2008.
  139. 1 2 Roosevelt, Franklin D. "First Inaugural Address". Bartleby. Retrieved March 2, 2008.
  140. Burns 1956, p. 157, 167-68.
  141. Smith 2007, pp. 318–23.
  142. Hawley 1995, p. 124.
  143. Smith 2007, p. 346.
  144. Tritch, Teresa (March 7, 2014). "FDR Makes the Case for the Minimum Wage". The New York Times..
  145. Pederson, William D., ed. (2011). A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 159–60. ISBN 978-1-4443-9517-4.
  146. Savage, Sean J. (1991). Roosevelt, the Party Leader, 1932-1945. University Press of Kentucky. p. 160. ISBN 0-8131-3079-4.
  147. Freidel & 1952–73, pp. 4, 320–39.
  148. Freidel & 1952–73, pp. 4, 448–52.
  149. "Economy's End". Time. August 26, 1935. (Subscription required (help)).
  150. "Bonus Bill Becomes Law". The New York Times. January 28, 1936.
  151. Best, Gary Dean (1992). FDR and the Bonus Marchers, 1933-1935. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-93715-7.
  152. Hausman, Joshua K. (April 2016). "Fiscal Policy and Economic Recovery: The Case of the 1936 Veterans' Bonus" (PDF). American Economic Review. 106 (4). doi:10.1257/aer.20130957.
  153. 1 2 Thornton, Mark, The Real Reason for FDR's Popularity, Mises
  154. Darby, Michael R. (February 1976). "Three and a half million US Employees have been mislaid: or, an Explanation of Unemployment, 1934–1941" (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 84 (1): 1–16. JSTOR 1830168. doi:10.1086/260407.
  155. 1 2 Fried, Albert (2001). FDR and His Enemies: A History. St. Martin's Press. pp. 120–23. ISBN 978-1-250-10659-9.
  156. Burns 1956, p. 350.
  157. Burns 1956, p. 226.
  158. Roosevelt, Franklin Delano (1933). Looking forward. John Day. p. 141.
  159. 1 2 Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970. The Bureau of the U.S. Census. 1976. pp. Y457, Y493, F32.
  160. Smiley 1983, pp. 487–93.
  161. "Presidents and Job Growth" (GIF). The New York Times (graphic). July 2, 2003.
  162. Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970. The Bureau of the U.S. Census. 1976. p. F31.
  163. Roosevelt, Franklin D. (October 3, 1942). "Establishing the Office of Economic Stabilization" (executive order).
  164. Roosevelt, Franklin D. (February 6, 1943). "Against a Repeal of the $25,000 Net Salary Limitation" (letter).
  165. Roosevelt, Franklin D. (February 15, 1943). "To the House Ways and Means Committee on Salary Limitation" (letter).
  166. Brinkley 2016
  167. Woolner, D.; Henderson, H., eds. (2005). FDR and the Environment. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-10067-1.
  168. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1941). Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1940, Volume 9. p. 530.
  169. "The National Parks: America's Best Idea: History Episode 5: 1933-1945". PBS. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  170. Brinkley 2016, pp. 170-86.
  171. Maher, Neil M. (July 2002). "A New Deal Body Politic: Landscape, Labor, and the Civilian Conservation Corps" (PDF). Environmental History. 7 (3): 435–61. JSTOR 3985917.
  172. Brinkley 2016, pp. 216–17.
  173. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 199–203.
  174. Doenecke & Stoler 2005, p. 120.
  175. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 203–10.
  176. Burns 1956, p. 254.
  177. Burns 1956, p. 255.
  178. Burns 1956, p. 256.
  179. Burns 1956, p. 261.
  180. Burns 1956, p. 257.
  181. Burns 1956, p. 284.
  182. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 183–96.
  183. Burns 1956, p. 381.
  184. Burns 1956, p. 320.
  185. Pusey, Merlo J. (April 1958). "FDR vs. the Supreme Court". American Heritage Magazine. 9 (3). Archived from the original on May 7, 2006.
  186. Burns 1956, p. 312.
  187. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 231–39.
  188. Shesol, Jeff (2011). Supreme Power: Franklin Roosevelt vs. the Supreme Court. W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-07941-8.
  189. Pederson 2011, Chapter 9
  190. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 239–43.
  191. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 262–63, 271–73.
  192. Brogan, Hugh (2001). The Penguin History of the United States of America (second ed.). Penguin. p. 565. ISBN 978-0-14-193745-8.
  193. Goldberg, Chad Alan (2007). Citizens and Paupers: Relief, Rights, and Race, from the Freedmen's Bureau to Workfare. University of Chicago Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-226-30077-1.
  194. Brands 2009, p. 272.
  195. Dallek 1995, p. 273.
  196. Roosevelt, Franklin Delano (October 5, 1937). Wikisource link to Quarantine the Aggressor. Wikisource.
  197. Murray, Williamson; Millett, Allan Reed (2001). A War To Be Won: fighting the Second World War. Harvard University Press. pp. 223–24. ISBN 978-0-674-04130-1.
  198. "Empire Comment on the Agreement". The Manchester Guardian. 1 Oct 1938. p. 7. We owe heartfelt thanks to all responsible for the outcome, and appreciate very much the efforts of President Roosevelt and Signor Mussolini to bring about the Munich conference of the Powers at which a united desire for peace has been shown.”
  199. Adamthwaite 1977, p. 209.
  200. Dallek 1995, pp. 166–73.
  201. Watt 1989, pp. 134–36.
  202. Keylor 1998, pp. 233–44.
  203. Black 2005, pp. 503–06.
  204. Burns 1956, p. 396.
  205. Gunther 1950, p. 15.
  206. "Roosevelt and Churchill: A Friendship That Saved The World". National Park Service.
  207. 1 2 Viorst 1965.
  208. Leuchtenburg 1963, pp. 399–402.
  209. Burns 1956, p. 420.
  210. Flynn, George Q. (1993). The Draft, 1940-1973. University Press of Kansas. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-7006-0586-6.
  211. Roosevelt, Franklin. Wikisource link to Roosevelt's Fireside Chat, 29 December 1940. Wikisource.
  212. "Travels of President Franklin D. Roosevelt". Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs. U.S Department of State. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  213. Burns 1956, p. 438.
  214. Burns 1956, p. 441.
  215. Burns 1970, p. 44.
  216. Burns 1970, p. 49.
  217. Burns 1970, p. 95.
  218. Caro, Robert A. (1982). The Path to Power. The Years of Lyndon Johnson. New York: Alfred A Knopf. pp. 578–81. ISBN 0-394-49973-5.
  219. Burns 1956, pp. 408–15, 422–30.
  220. Burns 1970, p. 6.
  221. Burns 1956, p. 454.
  222. Hartfield, Elizabeth (November 2, 2013). "Clinton in for Biden? A Look at VP Swaps Throughout History". ABC News. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
  223. Montuori, Craig (June 5, 2012). "How Did FDR Replace His Vice President Twice When It Seems So Politically Challenging Now?". Forbes.
  224. Nelson, Michael, ed. (2013). The Presidency A-Z (second ed.). Routledge. p. 483. ISBN 978-1-135-93786-7.
  225. Pastor, Robert (1999). A Century's Journey How The Great Powers Shape The World. Basic Books. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-465-05476-3.
  226. Arkes, Hadley (1997). The Return of George Sutherland: Restoring a Jurisprudence of Natural Rights. Princeton University Press. p. 196. ISBN 0-691-01628-3.
  227. Brands 2009, p. 638.
  228. Dallek 1995, pp. 232, 319, 373.
  229. Leuchtenburg, William E. (2015). In the Shadow of FDR: From Harry Truman to Barack Obama (fourth ed.). Cornell University Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-8014-6257-3.
  230. Knutsen, Torbjørn L. (1999). The Rise and Fall of World Orders. Manchester University Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-7190-4058-0.
  231. Herman 2012, pp. 128–29.
  232. Charles, Douglas M. (Spring 2000). "Informing FDR: FBI Political Surveillance and the Isolationist-Interventionist Foreign Policy". Diplomatic History. 24 (2): 211–32. doi:10.1111/0145-2096.00210.
  233. Croog, Charles E. (Spring 1992). "FBI Political Surveillance and the Isolationist-Interventionist Debate, 1939–1941". The Historian. 54: 441–58. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1992.tb00861.x.
  234. Statistical Abstract, US: Bureau of the Census, 1946, p. 173
  235. Schweikart & Allen 2004, p. 602.
  236. 1 2 Churchill 1977, p. 119.
  237. Burns 1970, p. 115.
  238. Burns 1970, pp. 141–42.
  239. Burns 1970, pp. 126–28.
  240. Gunther 1950, pp. 15–16.
  241. Burns 1970, p. 148.
  242. Burns 1970, p. 333.
  243. Burns 1970, p. 343.
  244. Herman 2012, pp. 139–44, 151, 246.
  245. Burns 1970, pp. 339–42.
  246. Burns 1970, p. 436.
  247. Burns 1970, pp. 134–46.
  248. Burns 1970, p. 159.
  249. Fleming, Thomas (December 1987). "The Big Leak: Secret War Plans Revealed in December of 1941". American Heritage. 38 (8).
  250. Maffeo, Steven E., Capt. (2015). U.S. Navy Codebreakers, Linguists, and Intelligence Officers against Japan, 1910-1941: A Biographical Dictionary. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 311. ISBN 978-1-4422-5564-7.
  251. Smith 2007, pp. 523–39.
  252. Chambers, John Whiteclay (1999). The Oxford Companion to American Military History. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 351. ISBN 978-0-19-507198-6.
  253. Matloff, Maurice; Snell, Edwin M. (1953). Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare: 1941–1942 (PDF). The War Department.
  254. Larrabee 1987.
  255. Sherwood 1949.
  256. Sainsbury 1994, p. 184.
  257. Woolner, David B.; Kimball, Warren F.; Reynolds, David, eds. (2008). FDR's World: War, Peace, and Legacies. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-230-61625-7.
  258. Burns 1970, pp. 180–85.
  259. "World War II Enemy Alien Control Program Overview". National Archives. September 23, 2016.
  260. Doenecke & Stoler 2005.
  261. Kelly, Brian. "The Four Policemen and Postwar Planning, 1943-1945: The Collision of Realist and Idealist Perspectives".
  262. Burns 1970, p. 284.
  263. Burns 1970, pp. 318–24.
  264. Burns 1970, pp. 327–28.
  265. Burns 1970, p. 371.
  266. Burns 1970, p. 228.
  267. Miscamble 2007, pp. 51–52.
  268. "FDR at Malta". Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
  269. 1 2 Berthon & Potts 2007, pp. 296–97.
  270. "Medical Research Pays Off for All Americans". NIH Medline Plus. National Institutes of Health. Summer 2007. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
  271. Hastings, Max (January 19, 2009). "Franklin D Roosevelt: The man who conquered fear". The Independent. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
  272. Burns 1970, p. 448.
  273. Lerner, Barron H. (November 23, 2007). "How Much Confidence Should We Have in the Doctor's Account of FDR's Death?". History News Network. George Washington University.
  274. Bruenn, Howard G. (April 1970). "Clinical notes on the illness & death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt". Annals Internal Medicine. 72 (4): 579–91. PMID 4908628. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-72-4-579.
  275. Gunther 1950, pp. 372–74.
  276. Sweeney, Michael S. (2001). Secrets of Victory: The Office of Censorship and the American Press and Radio in World War II. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 183–85. ISBN 978-0-8078-7560-5.
  277. Brinkley, Alan (2010). The Publisher: Henry Luce and his American Century. Knopf Doubleday. pp. 302–03. ISBN 978-0-307-59291-0.
  278. Jordan, David M. (2011). FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944. Indiana University Press. p. 321. ISBN 0-253-35683-0.
  279. Burns 1970, pp. 533, 562.
  280. Burns 1970, p. 578.
  281. Burns 1970, p. 579.
  282. Burns 1970, p. 573.
  283. "President Roosevelt's Report To Congress On the Crimea Conference". The New York Times. March 1, 1945.
  284. Dallek 1995, p. 520.
  285. Burns 1970, p. 587.
  286. Jones, Jeffrey M.; Jones, Joni L. (September 2006). "Presidential Stroke: United States Presidents and Cerebrovascular Disease". CNS Spectrums (The International Journal of Neuropsychiatric Medicine). 11 (9): 674–78. doi:10.1017/S1092852900014760.
  287. "Person of the Century Runner-Up: Franklin Delano Roosevelt". Time. March 1, 2000. Archived from the original on June 1, 2000.
  288. Allies Overrun Germany (video). Universal Newsreel. 1945. Retrieved February 21, 2012.
  289. McCullough 1992, pp. 345, 381.
  290. "Jewish Vote in U.S. Elections". Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  291. Odo, Franklin (2002). The Columbia Documentary History of the Asian American Experience. Columbia University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-231-11030-3.
  292. Sitkoff, Harvard (1978). A new deal for Blacks: the emergence of civil rights as a national issue. Oxford University Press. p. 71. ISBN 0-19-502418-4.
  293. Collins, William J. (March 2001). "Race, Roosevelt, and Wartime Production: Fair Employment in World War II Labor Markets". The American Economic Review. 91 (1): 272–86. JSTOR 2677909.
  294. Roosevelt 2005, p. 25.
  295. McMahon, Kevin J. (2004). Reconsidering Roosevelt on Race: How the Presidency Paved the Road to Brown. University of Chicago Press. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-226-56112-7.
  296. Morse, Arthur D. (1968). While six million died; a chronicle of American apathy. Random House.
  297. Wyman, David S. (1968). Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis, 1938–1941. Pantheon.
  298. Feingold 1970.
  299. "Franklin Delano Roosevelt". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved January 10, 2014.
  300. Vile, John R. (2003). Great American Judges: An Encyclopedia. Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 357. ISBN 978-1-57607-989-8.
  301. "Text of Executive Order 8802". Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs. June 25, 1941. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  302. Burns 1970, p. 124.
  303. "Text of Executive Order 9066". History Matters. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  304. Daniels, Roger (1975). The decision to relocate the Japanese Americans. Lippincott. ISBN 978-0-397-47326-7.
  305. George Wolfskill and John Allen Hudson. All But the People: Franklin D. Roosevelt and His Critics, 1933–39 (Macmillan, 1969)
  306. Herbert S. Parmet and Marie B. Hecht. Never Again: A President Runs for a Third Term (1968), p. x.
  307. Richard Breitman and Allan J. Lichtman, FDR and the Jews (2013),
  308. Greg Robinson, A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America (2009)
  309. Ira Katznelson, Fear Itself: The New Deal and the Origins of Our Time (2014)
  310. "Historian Survey Results Category: Performance Within Context of Times". C-SPAN Survey of Presidential Leadership. C-SPAN. Archived from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  311. "Presidential Leadership – The Rankings". Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company. September 12, 2005. Archived from the original on November 2, 2005. Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  312. "New ranking of U.S. presidents puts Lincoln at No. 1, Obama at 18; Kennedy judged most overrated". Washington Post. February 16, 2015. Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  313. Leuchtenburg, William E. (1997). "Chapter One: Franklin D. Roosevelt: The First Modern President". The FDR Years: On Roosevelt and His Legacy. Columbia University Press.
  314. Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr (1962), "Liberalism in America: A Note for Europeans", The Politics of Hope, Riverside Press
  315. Black, Conrad (2005), Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Champion of Freedom, pp. 1126–27
  316. Leuchtenburg, William E. (2001), In the Shadow of FDR: From Harry Truman to George W. Bush
  317. Smith 2007, p. ix.
  318. "FDR Memorial Dedication". Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  319. jessiekratz (10 April 2015). "The other FDR Memorial". Pieces of History. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  320. "Dime". Circulating Coins. United States Mint. Retrieved October 11, 2008.
  321. Reiter, Ed (June 28, 1999). "Franklin D. Roosevelt: The Man on the Marching Dime". PCGS. Archived from the original on August 20, 2008. Retrieved October 11, 2008.
  322. Scott, Specialized US Stamp Catalogue
  323. Gunther 1950, pp. 87–89, 337–38.
  324. Brennan, Linda Crotta. Franklin D. Roosevelt's Presidency. Lerner Publications. p. 60. ISBN 9781467785495.

Bibliography

Biographical

Scholarly topical studies

  • Alter, Jonathan (2006), The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope (popular history), ISBN 978-0-7432-4600-2 .
  • Badger, Anthony (2008), FDR: The First Hundred Days, ISBN 0-8090-4441-2  200 pp; overview by leading British scholar.
  • Beasley, Maurine, ed. (2001), The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia, et al, ISBN 0-313-30181-6 .
  • Bellush, Bernard (1955). Franklin D. Roosevelt as Governor of New York. LCCN 55006181. 
  • Brinkley, Douglas (2016). Rightful Heritage: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Land of America. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-208923-6. ; On his environmental and conservation beliefs & policies.
  • Collins, Robert M. (2002). More: The Politics of Economic Growth in Postwar America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515263-8. 
  • Graham, Otis L; Wander, Meghan Robinson, eds. (1985), Franklin D. Roosevelt: His Life and Times (encyclopedia), ISBN 978-0-8161-8667-9 .
  • Hawley, Ellis (1995). The New Deal and the Problem of Monopoly. Fordham University Press. ISBN 0-8232-1609-8. 
  • Jordan, David M (2011), FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, ISBN 978-0-253-35683-3 .
  • Kennedy, David M (1999), Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945 (wide-ranging survey of national affairs by leading scholar; Pulitzer Prize), ISBN 978-0-19-503834-7 .
  • (Summer 2009), "What the New Deal Did", Political Science Quarterly, 124 (2): 251–68, doi:10.1002/j.1538-165x.2009.tb00648.x .
  • Leuchtenburg, William E. (1963). Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932–1940. Harpers. ISBN 978-0-06-133025-4. 
  • (2005), "Showdown on the Court", Smithsonian (fulltext), Ebsco, 36 (2): 106–13, ISSN 0037-7333 .
  • McMahon, Kevin J (2004), Reconsidering Roosevelt on Race: How the Presidency Paved the Road to Brown, ISBN 978-0-226-50088-1 .
  • Miscamble, Wilson D. (2007). From Roosevelt to Truman: Potsdam, Hiroshima, and the Cold War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-86244-2. 
  • Parmet, Herbert S; Hecht, Marie B (1968), Never Again: A President Runs for a Third Term, Questia , on 1940 election.
  • Pederson, William D (2011), A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt, Chichester, West Sussex, U.K.: Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-1-4443-3016-8 , 768 pages; essays by scholars covering major historiographical themes. online
  • Rauchway, Eric (2008), The Great Depression and The New Deal; A Very Short Introduction, ISBN 978-0-19-532634-5 , balanced summary
  • Ritchie, Donald A (2007), Electing FDR: The New Deal Campaign of 1932, ISBN 978-0-7006-1687-9 .
  • Rosen, Elliot A (2005), Roosevelt, the Great Depression, and the Economics of Recovery, ISBN 978-0-8139-2368-0 .
  • Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr (1957–60), The Age of Roosevelt, 3 volumes, OCLC 466716 , the classic narrative history. Strongly supports FDR.
  • Shaw, Stephen K; Pederson, William D; Williams, Frank J, eds. (2004), Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Transformation of the Supreme Court, ISBN 978-0-7656-1033-1 .
  • Sitkoff, Harvard, ed. (1985), Fifty Years Later: The New Deal Evaluated (essays by scholars), ISBN 978-0-394-33548-3 .

Foreign policy and World War II

Criticism

  • Barnes, Harry Elmer (1953), Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace: A Critical Examination of the Foreign Policy of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Its Aftermath, OCLC 457149 . A revisionist blames FDR for inciting Japan to attack.
  • Best, Gary Dean (1991), Pride, Prejudice, and Politics: Roosevelt Versus Recovery, 1933–1938, Praeger, ISBN 0-275-93524-8 ; summarizes newspaper editorials.
  • Best, Gary Dean (2002), The Retreat from Liberalism: Collectivists versus Progressives in the New Deal Years, Praeger, ISBN 0-275-94656-8  criticizes intellectuals who supported FDR.
  • Breitman, Richard; Lichtman, Allan J (2013), FDR and the Jews, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-05026-6, OCLC 812248674 , 433 pp.
  • Conkin, Paul K (1975), New Deal, New York: Crowell, ISBN 0-690-00810-4 , critique from the left.
  • Doenecke, Justus D; Stoler, Mark A (2005), Debating Franklin D. Roosevelt's Foreign Policies, 1933–1945, Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 0-8476-9415-1 . 248 pp.
  • Feingold, Henry L (1970), The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust, 1938–1945, Rutgers University Press, ISBN 0-8135-0664-6, OCLC 98997 .
  • Flynn, John T (1948), The Roosevelt Myth , former FDR supporter condemns all aspects of FDR.
  • Moley, Raymond (1939), After Seven Years (insider memoir by Brain Truster who became conservative) .
  • Russett, Bruce M (1997), No Clear and Present Danger: A Skeptical View of the United States Entry into World War II (2nd ed.) , says US should have let USSR and Germany destroy each other.
  • Plaud, Joseph J (2005), Historical Perspectives on Franklin D. Roosevelt, American Foreign Policy, and the Holocaust, The FDR American Heritage Center Museum, archived from the original on January 12, 2014 .
  • Powell, Jim (2003), FDR's Folly: How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression, ISBN 0-7615-0165-7 .
  • Robinson, Greg (2001), By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans  says FDR's racism was primarily to blame.
  • Schivelbusch, Wolfgang (2006), Three New Deals: Reflections on Roosevelt's America, Mussolini's Italy, and Hitler's Germany, 1933–1939 , compares populist and paternalist features.
  • Schweikart, Larry; Allen, Michael (2004). A Patriot's History of the United States: From Columbus's Great Discovery to the War on Terror. Penguin Group US. ISBN 978-1-101-21778-8. 
  • Smiley, Gene (1993), Rethinking the Great Depression (short essay)  by libertarian economist who blames both Hoover and FDR.
  • Wyman, David S (1984), The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust 1941–1945, Pantheon Books . Attacks Roosevelt for passive complicity in allowing Holocaust to happen.

FDR's rhetoric

  • Braden, Waldo W; Brandenburg, Earnest, eds. (1955), "Roosevelt's Fireside Chats", Communication Monographs, 22 (5): 290–302, doi:10.1080/03637755509375155 .
  • Buhite, Russell D; Levy, David W, eds. (1993), FDR's Fireside Chats .
  • Craig, Douglas B (2005), Fireside Politics: Radio and Political Culture in the United States, 1920–1940 .
  • Crowell, Laura (1952), "Building the 'Four Freedoms' Speech", Communication Monographs, 22 (5): 266–83, doi:10.1080/03637755509375153 .
  • (1950), "Franklin D. Roosevelt's Audience Persuasion in the 1936 Campaign", Communication Monographs, 17: 48–64, doi:10.1080/03637755009374997 .
  • Houck, Davis W (2002), FDR and Fear Itself: The First Inaugural Address, Texas A&M UP .
  • (2001), Rhetoric as Currency: Hoover, Roosevelt, and the Great Depression, Texas A&M UP .
  • Roosevelt, Franklin D. (2005), My Friends, Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 1-4179-9610-2 
  • Ryan, Halford Ross (1979), "Roosevelt's First Inaugural: A Study of Technique", Quarterly Journal of Speech, 65 (2): 137–49, doi:10.1080/00335637909383466 .
  • (1988), Franklin D. Roosevelt's Rhetorical Presidency, Greenwood Press .
  • Stelzner, Hermann G (1966), "'War Message,' December 8, 1941: An Approach to Language", Communication Monographs, 33 (4): 419–37, doi:10.1080/03637756609375508 .

Historiography

  • Hendrickson, Jr., Kenneth E. "FDR Biographies," in William D. Pederson, ed. A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt (2011) pp 1–14 online
  • Provizer, Norman W. "Eleanor Roosevelt Biographies," in William D. Pederson, ed. A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt (2011) pp 15–33 online

Primary sources

  • Statistical Abstract of the United States (PDF), Bureau of the Census, 1951 ; full of useful data
  • Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1970, Bureau of the Census, 1976 .
  • Cantril, Hadley; Strunk, Mildred, eds. (1951), Public Opinion, 1935–1946 , massive compilation of many public opinion polls from the USA.
  • Gallup, George Horace, ed. (1972), The Gallup Poll; Public Opinion, 1935–1971 , 3 vol, summarizes results of each poll as reported to newspapers.
  • Loewenheim, Francis L; Langley, Harold D, eds. (1975), Roosevelt and Churchill: Their Secret Wartime Correspondence .
  • Moley, Raymond (1939), After Seven Years (memoir)  by key Brain Truster
  • Nixon, Edgar B, ed. (1969), Franklin D Roosevelt and Foreign Affairs  (3 vol), covers 1933–37. 2nd series 1937–39 available on microfiche and in a 14 vol print edition at some academic libraries.
  • Roosevelt, Franklin Delano (1945) [1938], Rosenman, Samuel Irving, ed., The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt (public material only (no letters); covers 1928–1945), 13 volumes .
  • (1946), Zevin, BD, ed., Nothing to Fear: The Selected Addresses of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1932–1945 (selected speeches) .
  • (2005) [1947], Taylor, Myron C, ed., Wartime Correspondence Between President Roosevelt and Pope Pius XII (reprint), Prefaces by Pius XII and Harry Truman, Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 1-4191-6654-9 .
  • The Documentary History of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidency (47 vol. 1995, University Press of America) table of contents
Listen to this article (info/dl)


This audio file was created from a revision of the "Franklin D. Roosevelt" article dated 2012-03-21, and does not reflect subsequent edits to the article. (Audio help)
More spoken articles

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.