"Where,
after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close
to home. So close and so small that they cannot be seen on any
maps of the world"
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- Eleanor Roosevelt
at the United Nations
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A few days after Franklin D. Roosevelt
died in April 1945, a reporter hailed his widow outside her home
and asked for a statement. "The story is over," she
replied. True, Eleanor Roosevelt's many years as the most influential
First Lady ended suddenly with the death of her husband, but her
own story continued for nearly two more decades. Vigorously promoting
the humanitarian causes so close to her heart, this unassuming
woman earned the title - in the words of President Harry S. Truman
- "First Lady of the World."
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"The greatest
thing
I have learned is
how good it is
to come home again"
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This simple statement, Eleanor Roosevelt
once told a friend, expresses her love for the modest house
near the Hudson River she called Val-Kill, the only home that
was ever hers.
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Anna Eleanor Roosevelt was born
October 11, 1884, to Elliott and Anna Hall Roosevelt, wealthy
New Yorkers. Her early memories were not all happy ones: "I
was a shy, solemn child," she recalled in her first autobiography.
Both her parents died by the time she was 10, and Eleanor lived
with her mother's family. Left alone much of the time, she spent
long hours reading but acknowledged "my real education did
not begin until I went abroad at fifteen." At the Allenswood
school in England, headmistress Marie Souvestre saw great potential
in the timid but intelligent teenager and cultivated in Eleanor
a concern for the oppressed that eventually became her trademark.
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Her academic training complete in
1902, Eleanor returned to New York and busied herself working
with the city's poor immigrants. She also began seeing her handsome
distant cousin Franklin Delano Roosevelt; before long the two
were engaged. On St. Patrick's Day in 1905, with scores of distinguished
guests looking on, Eleanor was given in marriage by her "Uncle
Ted" - President Theodore Roosevelt. As her husband embarked
on a career in politics, Eleanor tended to the needs of her household
and five children.
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1921 Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt's lives were altered irrevocably.
While vacationing at their summer home Franklin contracted a near-fatal
case of polio. When the worst was over, he fought to regain the
use of his legs, but his physical activity thereafter was extremely
limited.
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Franklin's political mentor Louis
Howe prodded Eleanor, always painfully shy in public, to become
vocal in the Democratic party so the name Roosevelt would not
be forgotten.
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Eleanor dutifully made speeches and
official appearances, and discovered that she had a talent -and
a liking- for politics. By the mid-1920s, the Eleanor who once
opposed women's suffrage was working enthusiastically for women's
rights and other progressive causes.
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Eleanor was an old hand at politics
by the time Franklin was elected president in 1932. She realized
that as a president's wife she was expected to deal exclusively
with social activities, but she aimed to be more useful. The "New
Deal" program for coping with the disastrous effects of the
Great Depression offered opportunities for her at the forefront
of the Roosevelt Administration.
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Franklin depended on Eleanor to gather
firsthand knowledge since he could not. Besides bringing him vivid
descriptions of the country's plight, she urged swift action to
change conditions she considered intolerable. Eleanor toured the
country extensively, observing poverty-stricken rural areas, city
slums, prisons, and even the inside of coal mines. Then came World
War II and Eleanor took off overseas to visit wounded American
servicemen in England, the Caribbean and the South Pacific, where
one amazed observer noted, "She went into every ward, stopped
at every bed, spoke to every patient." Her contribution to
the Roosevelt era is immeasurable. She said once, "Sometimes
I acted as a spur, even though the spurring was not always wanted."
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Eleanor looked forward to a quiet retirement at Val-Kill Cottage
where she planned to devote time to her large family. In 1946, however,
President Truman called her back into public life as a delegate
to the United Nations General Assembly. After resigning in 1952,
she resumed her career as a world traveler - begun during the war
- acting as a "good will ambassador." Considered the elder
stateswoman of the Democratic party, she worked in the 1956 and
1960 presidential campaigns. And she still found time to continue
her "My Day" column which she started in the 1930s, lecture
at Brandeis University, host a television talk show, write books,
and participate in numerous human rights organizations.
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She did not slow down until
a bone marrow disease made her too ill to run at her old pace. Her
death on November 7, 1962, ended her fight to improve the lot of
all mankind. "About the only value the story of my life may
have," Eleanor once wrote, "is to show that one can, even
without any particular gifts, overcome obstacles that seem insurmountable
if one is willing to face the fact that they must be overcome."
Her claim was all too modest. Had she not possessed "particular
gifts," Eleanor Roosevelt's story would not have been the story
of a great American.
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After Eleanor died in 1962, her house was made over into four
rental units. In 1970 the property was sold to private developers
who planned to build on the land. Worried that the development
would damage a valuable historic asset, concerned citizens organized
a drive to preserve the site, which in turn sparked interest in
establishing a national memorial.
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In May 1977 President Jimmy Carter
signed the bill creating the Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic
Site, "in order to commemorate for the education, inspiration,
and benefit of present and future generations the life and work
of an outstanding woman in American History."
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Roosevelt-Vanderbilt
National Historic Sites
4097 Albany Post Road
Hyde Park, NY 12538
Updated: 10-01-02
For questions please contact;
ROVA Webmaster
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