Elliott
Roosevelt, the second son and third child of Eleanor and
Franklin Roosevelt,
had a varied career in communications, politics and business.
Named for her father and like him in many ways, Elliott
was ER's favorite child and the one for whom she felt the
most responsibility. She blamed herself for many of his
difficulties – personal and professional – and
throughout her life tried to help him however she could.
However, ER's favoritism and Elliott's willingness to exploit
the Roosevelt name for his own gain led to tensions among
the other Roosevelt children and eventually to her own rupture
with Elliott.
Elliott attended Groton but, unlike his brothers, refused
to go to Harvard. Instead he embarked on a series of jobs
before settling on a career in communications in the early
1930s. Elliott's flamboyance attracted media attention
and
when he became manager of the Hearst radio chain in 1933,
the press alleged that he had obtained the job on the
strength
of his family name. ER deplored the publicity his appointment
generated and her son's affiliation with strident New
Deal
critics in Texas. Elliott further distanced himself from
his family when as a member of the Texas delegation at
the
1940 Democratic National Convention he proposed to nominate
Jessie Jones, the head of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation,
for vice-president rather than support FDR's announced
candidate,
Henry Wallace. ER, who
spoke at the convention, dissuaded him.
Elliott repaired his breach with his parents during World
War II when he accompanied FDR as a military aide to
the Casablanca meeting of 1943 and the Cairo-Teheran Conference
of 1944. As an Army photo reconnaissance pilot he and the
men in his unit also played a key role in the D-Day landings.
After FDR's death in 1945, Elliott and his family moved
to Top Cottage to be near ER and to enable her to live at
Val-Kill
as she wished. Mother and son also joined in a farming venture,
Val-Kill Farms. The business was not profitable and Elliott
eventually sold most of the farm property, which had been
part of FDR's estate; however, he continued to live at Top
Cottage until he sold the place in 1952. During this period,
Elliott also served as his mother's agent, arranging the
serialization of the second volume of her autobiography
and developing both a television and a radio series that
she hosted. Neither of these programs lasted long and the
radio show in particular drew criticism over Elliott's willingness
to use ER's name to endorse products advertised in the commercials.
Elliot's first book, As He Saw It (1946) was also
controversial. Critics attacked the book, which was based
on Elliott's experiences as FDR's wartime aide, as inaccurate
because it portrayed the British and the Americans as allies
against a largely guiltless Soviet Union in the postwar
world. ER, who did not agree with Elliott's conclusions
but had nevertheless written the book's dedication, defended
the book and her son. She continued her support of Elliot
by writing the introductions for four volumes of FDR's letters
that subsequently he edited.
However, by 1952 the relationship between mother and son
had frayed and Elliott left Hyde Park shortly after his
brother, John, with whom
he did not get along, moved into nearby Stone
Cottage.
Thereafter Elliott was involved in several different activities.
He raised Arabian horses in Portugal, served as mayor
of
Miami Beach between 1965 and 1969 and, with a collaborator,
produced three non-fiction books about his parents' lives.
He also wrote a series of mysteries in which ER was portrayed
as an amateur detective.
Elliott married five times and fathered four children. He also adopted the
four children of his last wife. He died of congestive heart
failure in 1990.
Sources:
Goodwin, Doris Kearns. No Ordinary Time: Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt: The Homefront in
World War II. New York: Touchstone Books, 1994, 178-179, 635.
Lash, Joseph P. Eleanor and Franklin. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1971, 490, 495,
622-623, 693.
Lash, Joseph P. Eleanor: The Years Alone. New York: W.W. Norton & Company 1972, 90-91;
172-173, 184-85.
Graham, Otis L. Jr. and Meghan Robinson Wander. Franklin
D. Roosevelt: His Life and Times. New York: Da Capo
Press, 1985, 366-367.