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Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882 - April
12, 1945), often referred to as FDR, was the 32nd (
1933 - 1945) President of the United States. He was
elected to an unprecedented four terms of office -
the only U.S. president elected more than twice, and
part of the reason the United States Constitution
was amended to limit presidents to 2 full terms (8
years). His main contributions were the instituting
of major economic and social assistance programs in
response to the Great Depression, leading the
country through a successful involvement in World
War II, and the formation of the United Nations.
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Order: |
32nd
President |
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Term of
Office: |
March 4 ,
1933 -
April 12 , 1945 |
|
Followed: |
Herbert
Hoover |
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Succeeded
by: |
Harry S.
Truman |
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Date of
Birth |
Monday ,
January 30 , 1882 |
|
Place of
Birth: |
Hyde Park,
New York |
|
Date of
Death: |
Thursday ,
April 12 , 1945 |
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Place of
Death: |
Warm
Springs, Georgia |
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First Lady
: |
Anna
Eleanor Roosevelt |
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Profession: |
lawyer |
|
Political
Party : |
Democrat |
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Vice
President : |
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Biography
He was born on
January 30, 1882 in Hyde Park, New York , and died
on April 12, 1945 in Warm Springs, Georgia of a
cerebral hemorrhage, leaving the famous Unfinished
Portrait . He suffered from polio at the age of 39,
which left him with severe difficulty in moving his
legs. He often used a wheelchair, but took efforts
to hide this disability throughout his life. In
fact, there are only two known photographs of
Roosevelt in his wheelchair. When a statue of
Roosevelt sitting in a wheelchair was commissioned
in Washington, DC in 2001, some criticized this as
unnecessary political correctness.
From the age of one, through until 1936, Roosevelt
spent his summers at Campobello Island, New
Brunswick but because of his worsening polio, in
later years he had to spend much of his time in Warm
Springs, whose namesake warm springs provided him
and others relief from their symptoms, and where he
built the Little White House, now a Georgia state
historic site. He also created the town's Roosevelt
Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation, which
continues to help others with disabilities to this
day.
He
graduated from Ivy League Harvard University in
1904, and from Ivy League Columbia Law School with a
J.D. in 1908 before taking a job with a prestigious
Wall Street firm. On St. Patrick's Day, 1905, he
married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt , a distant cousin,
who was the favorite niece of Theodore Roosevelt,
his fifth cousin. They would have six children:
-
Anna Eleanor
Roosevelt May 3 , 1906 - December 1 , 1975
-
James Roosevelt ,
December 23 , 1907 - August 13 , 1991
-
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Jr. , March 18 , 1909 - November 1 ,
1909
-
Elliott Roosevelt
, September 23 , 1910 - October 27 , 1990
-
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Jr. , August 17 , 1914 - August 17 ,
1988
-
John Aspinwall
Roosevelt , March 13 , 1916 - April 27 , 1981
Government Positions include: Assistant Secretary of
the Navy, 1913 - 1920 ; Governor of New York, 1929 -
1933. In the 1920 election Roosevelt was a candidate
for Vice-President of the United States on the
Democratic ticket with James M. Cox.
Roosevelt's Presidential campaign in 1932 saw the
New York governor committing himself to battling the
Great Depression, promoting a platform with "Three
R's - relief, recovery and reform." He coined the
term " New Deal " when he stated: "I pledge you, I
pledge myself, to a new deal for the American
people." On February 15 , 1933 after his victory in
the 1932 election, President-elect Roosevelt was
nearly assassinated in Miami, Florida (the assassin
did manage to kill Chicago, Illinois Mayor Anton J.
Cermak ). In reference to the Great Depression,
Roosevelt proclaimed "The only thing we have to fear
is fear itself" in his inauguration speech on (
March 4 , 1933 ). Roosevelt's first weeks in office
were called The Hundred Days, as during the first
part of his administration he authored and approved
a flurry of Congressional acts to institute
immediate change and keep the nation's economy from
destabilizing. He insituted a four-day "banking
holiday" two days after he took office: a four-day
period in which all banks in the country closed,
allowing the institutions a brief period to recover
and reorganize. During this time of crisis Roosevelt
addressed the nation for the first time as President
on March 12, 1933 in the first of many " Fireside
Chats."
Of
the various reform programs initiated by the
Roosevelt administration, the most far-reaching and
influential was the institution of the Social
Security system, a form of welfare that was meant to
provide support for low-income and elderly citizens.
In
1935 - 1936, the Supreme Court, which was dominated
by conservatives with a narrow view of the
interstate commerce clause of the Constitution, the
basis of much New Deal legislation, struck down
eight of FDR's New Deal programs. In response
Roosevelt submitted to Congress in February of 1937
a plan for "judicial reform," which proposed adding
a justice for every justice over the age of 70 who
refused to retire, up to a maximum of 15 total. This
came to be known as his attempt to "pack" the Court.
Though the plan failed in Congress, as a threat to
the Court it may have had its desired effect. In a
move cynically referred to as "the switch in time
that saved nine," one of the conservative justices
inexplicably shifted his vote in West Coast Hotel
Co. v. Parrish , changing the ideological balance of
the Court. It wasn't long before time allowed
Roosevelt to further have his way on the bench, as
vacancies allowed Roosevelt to eventually fill all
nine seats with his appointments--the most of any
presidency except George Washington 's.
In
1937, Roosevelt became the first U.S. President to
be inaugurated on January 20th , following adoption
of the Twentieth Amendment to the United States
Constitution . Prior to this, presidents had been
sworn into office on March 4th .
Campaigning for re-election in 1940 against Wendell
L. Willkie , Roosevelt said that he would not send
American boys to fight in foreign wars. However, in
1941 the conflicting interests of Japan and the
United States in Asia and the Pacific , especially
in China , resulted in a breakdown of diplomatic
relations to the point where war seemed inevitable
(see entry for Hull note ). Some have suggested
Roosevelt had prior knowledge of the December 7,
1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and welcomed it
as a way to get the U.S. into World War II. Others
point out, that while U.S. code-breakers had broken
Japanese codes in Washington, D.C. and knew
something was about to happen, communication delays
prevented the messages from getting to Pearl Harbor
until 4 hours after the attack.
On
May 18, 1942, Roosevelt wrote a private letter to
William Lyon Mackenzie King, Prime Minister of
Canada, in which he discusses that the USA and
Canada agree on an unwritten plan aiming to disperse
French-Canadians in order to assimilate them more
quickly.
On
January 14, 1943 Roosevelt became the first
President of the United States to travel via
airplane while in office with his flight from Miami,
Florida to Morocco to meet with Winston Churchill to
discuss World War II. The meeting was concluded on
January 24.
In
hindsight, perhaps the most controversial decision
Roosevelt made was Executive Order 9066 which
resulted in the internment in concentration camps of
110,000 Japanese nationals and American citizens of
Japanese descent on the West Coast. Considered a
major violation of civil liberties , it was even
opposed at the time by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover
, Eleanor Roosevelt as well as many other groups.
The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of
the Executive Order. Others have criticised him for
failing to do anything to disrupt the Nazi
operations in perpetrating the Holocaust despite
having intelligence of the atrocity.
Some have said of all the American Presidents of the
20th century, that he was the most loved and most
hated. He was so well known, he was referred to by
his initials, FDR. Historians have often cited him
as one of the three United States Presidents whose
influence and leadership set a standard for
greatness, along with George Washington and Abraham
Lincoln .
Roosevelt was the first President to regularly
address the American public through the medium of
radio. He instituted a tradition of weekly radio
speeches, which he called "fireside chats." These
"chats" gave him the opportunity to take his
opinions to the American people, and they often
bolstered his popularity as he campaigned for
various changes. During World War II the fireside
chats were seen as important morale boosters for
Americans at home.
One
speech he is famous for delivering was his State of
the Union Address in 1941. This speech is also known
as the Four Freedoms Speech. His address to Congress
and the nation on December 8, 1941 following the
attack on Pearl Harbor entered history with the
phrase, "December Seventh, 1941 - a date which will
live in infamy."
He
was elected to an unprecedented fourth term on
November 7, 1944, beating Republican challenger
Thomas E. Dewey. However, during the painting of his
portrait, he died of a brain hemorrhage on April 12,
1945 and was succeeded by his vice president Harry
S. Truman. In 1951 the Twenty-second Amendment to
the United States Constitution was passed, which
limited all presidents from that point forward to
two terms (this was previously just a custom that
was established by George Washington and followed by
every president up to Roosevelt).
Roosevelt's portrait appears on the U.S. dime.
Agencies founded during Roosevelt's Presidency
-
Tennessee Valley
Authority (1933)
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Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC)
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Public Works
Administration (PWA)
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Works Progress
Administration (WPA)
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Social Security
Administration
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Federal Housing
Administration (FHA)
Supreme Court appointments
-
Hugo Black (AL)
August 19 , 1937 - September 17 , 1971
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Stanley Forman
Reed (KY) January 31 , 1938 - February 25 ,
1957
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Felix Frankfurter
(MA) January 30 , 1939 - August 28 , 1962
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William O. Douglas
(CT) April 17 , 1939 - November 12 , 1975
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Frank Murphy (MI)
February 5 , 1940 - July 19 , 1949
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Harlan Fiske Stone
(Chief Justice, NY) July 3 , 1941 - April 22 ,
1946
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James Francis
Byrnes (SC) July 8 , 1941 - October 3 , 1942
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Robert H. Jackson
(NY) July 11 , 1941 - October 9 , 1954
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Wiley Blount
Rutledge (IA) February 15 , 1943 - September 10
, 1949
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