TABLE OF CONTENTS
How to Use TwHP Lessons
About This Lesson
Setting the Stage: Historical Context
Locating the Site: Maps
1. Eleanor Roosevelt NHS
and Surrounding Region
2. Eleanor Roosevelt's Home
at Val-Kill
Determining the Facts: Readings
1. Eleanor Roosevelt at Val-Kill
2. Goodwill Ambassador
to the World
3. Universal Declaration
of Human Rights
4. A Complex Woman
Visual Evidence: Images
1. Val-Kill
2. Members of UNESCO Meet
with Eleanor Roosevelt
3. Eleanor Roosevelt Lunches
with Future President, August 17, 1960
4. Eleanor Roosevelt Hosts
Visitors from Overseas
Putting It All Together: Activities
1. My Day
2. The Declaration of
Human Rights
3. Local Volunteer
Organizations
RELATED INFORMATION
Eleanor Roosevelt NHS
Curriculum Kit Home
TwHP Home
National Register Home
Supplementary Resources
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"My Missus and some of her female political friends want to build a shack on a stream in the back woods and want, instead of a beautiful marble bath, to have the stream dug out so as to form an old-fashioned swimming hole."
This is how Franklin D. Roosevelt described his wife Eleanor's ambition to build a retreat for herself and her friends away from the big family house at Hyde Park, New York. The "shack," built in 1925 near a gently flowing stream, was actually a stone cottage situated on land FDR offered the women for their lifetime use.
The following year, the women had a second building constructed on the site to house a small furniture factory. After the factory closed in 1936, Roosevelt converted the building into a cottage for herself, her secretary, and guests, and christened it "Val-Kill Cottage." She used the cottage only sparingly until the death of FDR in 1945. Then, she moved permanently to Val-Kill. She had once described Val-Kill as the place "where I used to find myself and grow" and where "I emerged as an individual." It was truly her home and the place where she came into her own. She gained strength and inspiration from the pastoral surroundings.
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