Read Eleanor and Franklin Online
Authors: Joseph P. Lash
Perkins, Frances W., 350, 403â5, 470, 486, 488, 496, 572, 747, 748, 761, 788, 789, 793, 794, 826
in Consumers League, difficulties with Franklin, 213
eulogy on Eleanor at 1936 Democratic convention, 557
periodic campaigns against, 583â85
and plan to overhaul public-employment service, 419
racial issue and, 650
and youth-movement question, 684
Personal Letters
(F. D. Roosevelt), 281
Peter (of
Yugoslavia
), 846
Peterson, Cecil, 877
Phillips, Caroline, 233, 237, 238, 246, 247, 248, 282, 341, 406, 428, 550, 750
see also
Drayton, Caroline
Phillips, Christopher, 613
Phillips, William, 232, 233â34, 244, 245â47, 248, 272, 307, 406, 428
Pickett, Clarence, 493, 497, 498â99, 500, 503, 505â6, 579, 648, 713, 714â15, 716â17, 721
Pilat, Oliver, 776
Pinchot, Leila, 822
Pittman, Key, 707
Polier, Justine Wise, 733, 822
Polk, Lily, 196, 238
Polly,
see
Delano, Laura
Popular Front, 754, 757, 759, 760
Powell, Rev. Adam Clayton, 857
Pratt, Mrs. John, 347
Pratt, Trude, 608, 860, 905
Prenosil, Stanley W., 391
Price, Byron, 453
Prohibiting Poverty
(Martin), 482â83, 680
Putnam, George Palmer, 462
Pynchon, Charles F., 504, 510
Rainey, Dr. Homer P., 686
Randolph, A. Philip, 676â77
Rantoul, Lois, 291
Raset, Zena, 819
Raskob, John J., 397, 548, 561
Rayburn, Sam, 559
Read, Elizabeth, 353â54, 357, 381, 599, 604
and Eleanor's relationship with, 322
Reading, Lady Stella, 265, 812â13, 821, 822, 836, 837, 839, 848
Reeves Floyd, 698
Regler, Gustave, 722
Reid, Helen, 795
Reid, Jean, 119, 121, 130
Reid, Mrs. Whitelaw, 287
Reid, Whitelaw, 119, 130
Reuther, Walter, 894, 897, 898
Rhodes, June Hamilton, 393, 458
Richardson, Margaret (Mrs. Hall Roosevelt), 215, 223
Richberg, Donald, 650
Riley, Betty,
see
Roosevelt, Betty
Rios, Señora de los, 722, 724
Ritchie, Albert, 548
Robbins, Muriel (Moo), 129, 130, 131, 158, 167, 170, 190, 194
Robbins, Warren Delano, 131, 172, 446
Roberts, Chalmers, 842, 848, 849
Robeson, Paul, 895
Robins, Mrs. Raymond, 291
Robinson, Corinne (aunt), 3â4, 5, 12, 22, 49, 55, 65, 68, 69, 109, 119, 122, 124, 126, 132â33, 152, 163, 164, 165, 178, 187, 206, 313, 472
on Eleanor at Allenswood, 102, 103
Elliott's French mistress writes to, 69â70
Lucy Mercer affair and, 278
reaction to Eleanor's engagement, 169
Robinson, Corinne (cousin),
see
Alsop, Mrs. Joseph
Robinson, Douglas, 49, 65, 178, 257
Robinson, Douglas, Jr., 190
Robinson, Helen,
see
Roosevelt, Helen
Robinson, Joseph, 579, 651, 652, 707
Robinson, Theodore Douglas, 113, 163, 178, 187â88, 192, 195, 199, 205, 206, 215
Roche, Josephine, 587
Rockefeller, Nelson, 811
Roddan, Edward L., 555, 560, 568
Rodman, Selden, 797
Rogers, Edith Nourse, 733
Rogers, Edmund, 190
Rogge, O. John, 594â95
Rohde, Ruth Bryan, 593
Roosevelt, Alice,
see
Longworth, Alice Roosevelt
Roosevelt, Alice Lee, 29
Roosevelt, Anna (Mrs. William Sheffield; Aunt Bamie or Bye), 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 12, 14, 16, 28, 29, 37, 38, 65, 88, 89, 90, 100, 102, 105, 109, 117, 158, 160, 165, 167, 170â71, 178, 205, 206, 213, 216, 220, 221, 233, 608
and Anna Hall Roosevelt's decision concerning children, 56
assists at Eleanor's birth, 29
with Elliott at Mariengrund sanitarium, 45
and Elliott's separation from wife, 49, 50, 51
Elliott turns against, 63
Franklin a favorite of, 125
Franklin and Eleanor stay with, 229
helps adjudge Elliott insane, 46
her at-homes set example for Eleanor, 118
influence of on Eleanor, 288
reaction to Eleanor's engagement, 169
Theodore's visits to, 118
on Washington ritual of social calls, 226
Roosevelt, Anna Eleanor (daughter), 179, 195, 196, 203, 259, 280, 294, 312, 331, 341â42, 351, 364, 396, 427, 441, 445, 457, 467, 543, 544, 570, 599, 608, 612, 614â15, 616, 618, 620, 624, 629, 633, 782, 784, 801, 818â19, 884, 907, 911, 919, 920
abroad with Sara (1925), 372
accompanies father to Yalta, 913
birth and christening of, 189â90
and birth of first child, 375
on difference between parents' personalities, 640
divorces Curtis Dall, 465
and father's illness, 889
n
, 891
letter to father as child, 201
marriage of, Sara's wedding gift to, 373â74
on mother's jealousy, 640â41
problems with marriage, 429
quoted, 242â43
relationship with mother as teenager, 372â74
and resentment of Louis Howe, 341â42
resents Missy, 640â41
run-in with father, 343
stays at White House, 891â92
upbringing and education of, 236â44
passim
, 296, 297
Roosevelt, Anna Hall (mother), 3, 16, 17, 18, 23â24, 65, 70, 112, 117â18, 173, 605
and birth of Elliott Jr., 40
and
Britannic
collision, 35
and children's education, 52
and courtship and marriage to Elliott, 21â25
and disappointment in Eleanor, 40
education and religious training of, 19â21
and Elliott's absence, 41
and European trip, Elliott placed in asylum, 42â47
family background of, 17â21
has Elliott adjudged insane, 46â47
illness and death, 55â56
illness of, 50
income and lifestyle of, her beauty, 26, 27â28
makes Eleanor feel excluded, 40
pregnancy of, Eleanor's birth, 29
return to States, life at Hempstead House, 37
and separation from Elliott, 49â51
sons a comfort to, 53
trip to Europe resumed, 36
Roosevelt, Archibald, Jr., 771
Roosevelt, Betty, 235, 441
Roosevelt, Christine, 114, 115, 125
Roosevelt, Corinne,
see
Robinson, Corinne (aunt)
Roosevelt, Cornelius Van Schaack, 5
Roosevelt, Danny (grandson), 616â17, 819
Roosevelt, Dorothy, 114
Roosevelt, Edith (Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt), 89, 170, 171, 232, 262, 283, 644
ROOSEVELT, ELEANOR CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH:
at Allenswood, 91â107
and
Ambition
(school composition), 85â86
and ambition and will to succeed, 85
aristocracy, 149
artistic endeavors of, 94â95
attends Theodore's inauguration, 170â71
attitude toward society, Auntie Bye and Uncle Theodore help, 117, 118â19
attributes to Franklin virtues ascribed to father, 149
and Aunt Pussie's taunts, 114
birth of, 29â30
and brothers' illness, Elliott Jr.'s death, 62
Candida
foreshadows role with Franklin, 156â57
care of mother during illness, 50
changes in N.Y. since her childhood, 109
childhood fears and insecurities of, 33
childhood reading memories, 53
and Christmas party at Aunt Corinne's, 90
and circle of friends, 93, 117
classmates' recollection of, her schoolwork, 73â79
contrasted with cousin Alice, 38
correspondence with father, 66â68
courtship and engagement of, 126â37, 150, 152â61, 162â70
cousin Alice's opinion of, 88
Cousin Susie objects to settlement work of, 121
as debutante, social functions surrounding, 112â15
deep puritanical stain in, 154
devoted to Aunt Pussie, 87
disappointed in father, still loves him, 66
and donkey incident at Sorrento, 44
dreads social debut, 110, 112, 113
effect of Allenswood on personality, 91, 103, 106
emerges as leader in Junior League, 122
engagement made public, 167â68
enrolls Hall in Groton, 117â18
envious of Abingdon children, 64
exquisite manners of, 115
faithful churchgoer, 159
father's breakdown and, 48
and father's death, 69, 70, 73
and father's fractured ankle, 39
father's visits, 63
favorite literature of, 83â84, 84
n
and fear of strangers, 53
feels excluded by mother, 40
and first Hyde Park visit, 34
Franklin becomes interested in, 124â26
Franklin gives ring to, 167
and Franklin's Caribbean cruise, 152, 158, 160
Franklin's family likes and accepts, 162â63
and Franklin's lost poem, 131
n
and Franklin's return from the Caribbean, 160
in French convent, 45
and
Gilded Butterflies
(school composition), 78â79
goes abroad with parents, 42â45
on Grandfather Hall, 19
n
great-grandmother and, 18
Hall family depends on, 117
at Hempstead House, 37â38
her mother's debut and, 113
ideals and values of, 86â88
improved health and appearance of, 103
inherits Theodore Sr.'s philanthropic traits, 6, 12
is “yea sayer” by temperament, 155
joins Consumers League, investigates sweatshop working condition, 122â23
joins Junior League, works at Rivington Street Settlement, 119, 160
left at home after
Britannic
collision, 35â36, 73
literary aspirations of, 116
love of nature as adolescent, 80â81
love of poetry of, 78
and
Loyalty and Friendship
(school composition), 86
lying difficult for, hard concealing engagement, 152â53, 164
makes rounds of Oyster Bay kin, 109
Marie Souvestre's teachings temper Franklin's views, 147â48
as mediator between mother and son, 162
on men of genius and tasks of a poet, 95â96
mistrusts Franklin's feelings, 127â29
mother's coldness and father's devotion to, 34â35, 40
and mother's death, Grandma Hall made guardian, 56
neglected by grandmother, 73â75
at Oak Terrace prior to debut, 111
as an outsider, 72
opposed to women's suffrage, Colony Club invitation, 159
“painfully high ideals no sense of humor,” 153â54
and parents' separation, 50, 53
plainness and gravity of, 34
reaction to anticlericalism, 100â101
receives attentions from other men, 164
relationship with Marie Souvestre, 93, 97â104, 107, 111, 118
relationship with Oyster Bay relatives, 89
religious upbringing of, 61â62
report cards of, 96â97
returns home from Allenswood with Aunt Pussie, their fight, 104â6
returns to Allenswood for third year, 106
returns to America (1902), exposed to country's reform mood, 108â10
and Roser classes, 52
and Roser classes, father's advice on education, 59â60
on Russo-Japanese War, 158
and Sara's objections to and interference with engagement, 134â37, 138â42, 152, 160
Sara yields to their plans, 161
and secret understanding with father, 57
sees Lyman Delano, 153
shares society's anti-Semetism, 166
social idealism of, 119â20
social poise of, 155
standards of taste and judgement refined, 94â96
stays at Campobello with Franklin, 165â66
strength of character of, 86
and summer months at Tivoli, 81â84
and Sunday-visit-to-Hyde-Park issue, 138â41
and
The Flowers Discussion
(school composition), 79â81
and
The Tempest
(school composition), 72â73
three years at Allenswood her happiest, 107
and time for reading at Tivoli, 116
tone of father's correspondence, 58, 65
and trip to Florence, 104
tyrannized by governess, 75
and Uncle Gracie's death, 132â33
and Uncle Vallie's alcoholism, 111â12
visits settlement-house child with Franklin, 166
wedding arrangements of, 170â73
wedding ceremony and reception of, 172â74
and world into which born, 29â33
ROOSEVELT, ELEANOR WIFE AND MOTHER:
accepted by social elite, 234
adjustment problems with Franklin, 192â94
aids Franklin politically, 212â13, 216â17
Alice tries canteen work, 264
angry with Theodore over Franklin's enlistment question, 257
approves of Hall's joining air force, 257
approves of Rosy Roosevelt's marriage, 235
attention shifts to wounded after war, 267
bad times with Franklin, buries self in work, 294
becomes versed in politics, 213, 216â17
and birth of Franklin Jr., 199
and births of second Franklin Jr. and John Aspinwall, 236â37
bothered by Jews at social functions, 263
canteen duties and other war work of, 255, 259, 260â62, 263â65
careful and frugal manager, runs athwart Sara, 214
with children while Franklin away, 200â202
climbs mast on the
Rhode Island
, 227
converts to women's suffrage, 258
desire to serve breaks confinement to family, 302
disastrous revel at Chevy Chase Club, 300
discourages intimacy with the Howes, 233
doing her job “better than anyone else,” 235
doubts about Hall's marriage, 223
effect of war on family life, 255, 262
effect of Wilson years on, 226
and Elliott's birth, 203, 207