Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, Jr, the fifth child of Franklin and Eleanor
Roosevelt was a lawyer and a politician. As a politician
he favored continuation of many of his parents' policies
and worked to secure strong federal and state support for
public housing, fair employment practices and civil rights.
Known in the family as "Brother" or "Brud," he and
the Roosevelts' youngest son, John,
spent considerable time with ER during their childhoods
in part because she was a more relaxed parent and in part
because of FDR's paralysis. At the same time, his interest
in politics enabled Franklin Jr. to forge a close relationship
with his father.
After graduating from Groton and Harvard, Franklin Jr. studied law at the
University of Virginia. He then joined FDR's 1940 reelection campaign, coordinating
youth activities for the Democratic National Committee and
working with various Roosevelt college clubs. He also practiced
law until he went into the navy in 1941.
When the war ended, Franklin Jr. practiced both law and politics. For the most part his political
positions matched ER's and he encouraged her to accept Harry Truman's offer to appoint her to the
United States delegation to the United Nations.
Franklin Jr.'s own political career was a combination
of appointive and elective office. He was chairman of
housing
activities for the American Veterans Committee (1945-47),
national vice-chairman of Americans
for Democratic Action, and vice-chairman of the President's
Civil Rights Commission (1949). Beginning in 1949, he
also
served three terms in Congress representing New York's
Twentieth Congressional District. His loss of the 1954
New York gubernatorial
nomination to Tammany-backed candidate Averell Harriman
effectively torpedoed his elective political career and
led to ER's involvement in a subsequent reform movement
that resulted in the demise of Tammany
and its boss, Carmine DeSapio. Franklin Jr. also lost two
later bids for elective office, one for New York state
attorney
general in 1954 and another bid for governor on the Liberal
ticket in 1966
In between those two campaigns, Franklin Jr. broke with
ER over the presidential candidacy of John F. Kennedy in
1960. (Previously they had disagreed when he and his brothers,
James and Elliott, had supported Dwight
Eisenhower for the 1948 Democratic presidential nomination.
Eisenhower later declared himself a Republican.) Despite
ER's opposition, Franklin Jr. campaigned for Kennedy in
the crucial West Virginia primary, which Kennedy won. After
Kennedy's election he named Franklin Jr. under secretary
of commerce, a position he held until 1965 when President
Lyndon Johnson named him head of the Equal Opportunity Commission.
He remained in that position until 1966.
As his political career waned, Franklin Jr. became increasingly
involved in business, importing foreign cars and working
in the banking industry. He also raised cattle on his farm
in Dutchess County, New York.
After ER's death in 1962, he served as chairman of the executive committee
of the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute and as ER's
literary executor. He also worked on the development of
the Roosevelt Campobello International Park.
Franklin Jr. was married five times and had five children. He died of cancer in 1988.
Sources:
Graham, Otis L., Jr. and Meghan Robinson Wander. Franklin
D. Roosevelt: His Life and Times. New York: Da
Capo Press, 1985, 368-369.
Lash, Joseph P. Eleanor: The Years Alone. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1972, 36, 91,
147-148, 274-275.