Read Eleanor and Franklin Online
Authors: Joseph P. Lash
arranges question session with Franklin, 774
Arthurdale chastening experience, 521â24
Arthurdale Franklin's idea, 495
and Arthurdale integration question, 648
Arthurdale project her “baby,” 499
and Arthurdale's experimental school, 512, 514â15, 518, 519
ascetic, puritan nature of, 634
and atom-bomb development, 898â902
attempts to bring in private industry to Arthurdale, 502â3
attempts to clear up Communist domination issue, 774, 776
attempts to stave off Odell Waller's execution, 853â55
attitude of New Deal officials toward, 574
attitude toward Betsy Roosevelt, 640â41
attitude toward Communists, 895
attitude toward divorce, 619
attitude toward Nye Committee and neutrality bill, 711
avoids advocacy of League of Nations, 710
as “back door” to Franklin, 588
becomes desegregationist, 674
being butt of ridicule difficult for, 631
on being wife of public official, 779â80
belief in Youth Congress vindicated, her advice to, 701â2
as best-dressed woman, 531
at Big House with Franklin, 608
at Buckingham Palace, 839
cabinet officers seek her patronage, 577â78
calls women to action, own set of national priorities, 477
calls youth to militancy, 482
and campaign and elections, 799â806
Catholic criticism of, 721â22, 723â24
charges of Communism, pay-envelope campaign, 565
Child Labor Amendment attacked, 747
and child-refugee issue, 732â34
children in the spotlight, 620â21
and Citizenship Institute demonstration, 765â66, 768â73
and civil defense, 811â14
close to Hopkins, 589
combines social duties with varied, useful life, 780
Communists criticize project, 507
Communists make headway in Jere, 510
and community-corporations plan, 515
compassion for all living things, 572
concept of Utopia, 478
concerned about unemployment problem, 590
concerned for unemployed youth, 679â80
concerned over conditions that breed revolution, 744â46
concerned over third term as First Lady, 807â8
concerned with postwar planning, full-employment issue, 894
confident Youth Congress leadership not Communist, 761â62, 764
conflict with Ickes over, 505â6, 507â8, 512â13
consults Baruch about costs of project, 509â10
and contact with Negro troops, 847, 848
contrasting reports indicate government action, 510
and controversy surrounding self, 560â62
and convention, 903, 904
and convention, her role in, 789â95
correspondence with Carola von
Schaeffer-Bernstein, 712, 720, 731, 741, 742â43
and Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill, 651â56
country and Congress become hostile to project, 518
criticism and defeat of factory project, 501â2
DAR convention speech of, 527â28
deals with Congress, 578â81
and death of Danny Roosevelt, 616â17
defends Frances Perkins in Bridges affair, 584
defends Franklin's stand on Negro question, 855
defends government youth agencies, 701
defends Quakers, 713
defends sale of planes to France, 735â36
and defense and reform, conscription-and-tax-bills issue, 796â98
and demilitarization of, CCC, 700â701
and Detroit racial riot (1943), 856â57, 859
and Dies Committee hearing, 761â63, 764
and dinner with Churchill, 844
disappointed in Hopkins, 813
disapproval of loyalty oaths and Dies Committee, 754
disapproves of Franklin's “playboy” side, 640
divided-White-House-loyalties issue, 635â36
does not interfere in children's lives, 627â28
does not want to offend, but not cowed by bigots, 658â59
domestic White House duties of, 629
dreads invasion of Europe, 893
and Earl Miller, 608
and “Eleanor clubs,” 856
and Elliott's divorce, 887
encourages romances among friends, 608
encourages them to have own opinions, 613â14
endorses
Prohibiting Poverty
, 482â83
entertains George VI and Elizabeth, 737, 738â40
and equal-opportunity plea, concentrates on education, 648â49
estrangement from Nancy Cook and Marion Dickerman, 600â604
eulogy in her honor, 557
European developments, third-term considerations and, 785, 787
European developments make her uncertain of her views, 728â31
family turns to in times of trouble, 616â17
fascist aggression shakes her views on war, 719â20
feelings about Hyde Park, 611
feels compromise with Hitler possible, 715
feels that cooperation with Communists impossible, 759
and feud with Oyster Bay clan, Alice Longworth and, 644
fights against discrimination, 673
fights for health legislation, 586â88
fights for refrigerators, 504
and financial difficulties of Arthurdale, her sense of responsibility, 517
foreign developments also push her toward left, 755
on Frances Perkins' appointment, 488
and Frankfurter's warning about relationship with pacifists, 713â14
Franklin asks for declaration of war, 824
Franklin a source of power, 569â72, 574
Franklin irritated by Youth Congress, 768â70
with Franklin on campaign train, 563â64
and Franklin's acceptance speech, 557
and Franklin's campaign strategy, role given women's division, 553
Franklin's condition worsens, he goes to Warm Springs, 916
and Franklin's death and funeral, 919â23
and Franklin's decision to run for third term, 779â80, 781â84, 787
and Franklin's dependence on Anna, 891â92
and Franklin's “great design” for peace, 717
and Franklin's illness, 885, 889â91, 904, 906
and Franklin's meetings with Mme. Chiang, 862
Franklin's public relations, suffer, 548
and Franklin's “quarantine speech,” 718â19
and Franklin's recognition of Soviet Russia, 749â50
Franklin's relationship with children, 621, 623, 625
Franklin's support and, 812
and Franklin's victory, 907â8
and Franklin's views on Youth Congress demands, 767
and Franklin's “war before reform” speech, 886
friends worry about involvement in Youth Congress, 764
on future-of-Germany issue, 905
goodness of a source of power, 572
and government-factory project, 500â501
Goya etchings given to, 723â24
in great demand, lecture-tours contract, 529
grieves for men going to war, says good-by to James and Elliott, 832
growing Communist movement, New Deal policies undermine, 745
grows under Franklin's tutelage, 646
Hall's death and, 819
has confidence in youth, fears older people, 833
has misgivings about agreements with Soviet Union, 915
at headquarters while Franklin on cruise, 558
helps Pearl Buck reach Franklin on white-supremacy issue, 851, 852
her stand good politics, 659, 668, 673
holds meetings at 65th St. house, 682
homesteaders casualties of the Depression, 515
Hopkins and, 636â39
horrified by Moscow trials and purges, 755â57
and how-Arthurdale-to-be-governed issue, 517
Howe and, 638
hurt by Franklin's callousness, 645
Hyde Park her home, 600
impromptu defense of New Deal agencies, 591
increase in anti-Semitism, her views on Jewish question, 734â35
information on Soviet Russia, sources of, her reactions to, 751â54, 756â57
interested in rural life, 495
invites Al Smith to White House, 551
involvement in Workers Alliance, 757â58
and involvement with Communism (1930s), 744â45
involvement with WPA, 582, 589
and issue of posting of black GIs to England, 837
James and Elliott in uniform, 824
James fatalistic about entering war, 786
and James' relationship with father, 623
jokes about extent of her travels, 615â16
keynotes no-foreign-war crusade, 717
and land reform, “greenbelt town” programs, 518
Latin American tour of, 887â88
and launching of Subsistence Homestead Program, 494â500
as lecturer, 529â33, 538
and Lucy Mercer's visits while away, 893
lunch with Alice, 644
makes certain that new ideas looked into, 589â90
makes proposals for jobs, 781
and Marian Anderson concert, 664, 667â68
methods of dealing with bureaucracy, 573â74
as mistress of gaieties at Franklin's birthday parties, 633
mistrusts Churchill's idea for Anglo-American alliance, 882
the M. L. Wilsons visit White House, 496, 497â98
Mme. Chiang invited to meet Churchill, 866
and Mme. Chiang Kaishek's visit, 859â61
as moralist, further views on the Depression, 479
the Morgenthaus and, 639
“mother . . . a very jealous person,” 640â41
and Nazi-Soviet nonaggression pact, 758â59, 760
Nazi-Soviet Pact, Danzig crisis, 741
Negro “backwardness” not pretext for unequal treatment, 663â64
Negroes-in-armed-forces issue, 669â72, 673
and Negroes-in-defense-industries issue, 674â77
and Negroes' plight, attempts to bring to Franklin's attention, 647â48
Negro press association urges black appointments, against discriminatory NRA and USN policies, 650
neutrality laws not amended, her pessimism, 740â41
New Dealers prejudiced, Ickes her ally, 659
New Deal linked to Communism, 746â49
New Deal opposition grows, 548â50
and New Deal programs and legislation, 480â81
1934 elections endorse New Deal programs, 508
and 1936 campaign, 546
and 1940 campaign, Negro vote in question, 672â73
and 1944 campaign, 903â7
nonconformist stand of, and involvement with American Youth Congress, 687â94, 697â98, 701
and “nonpolitical” tour with Franklin, 556
NYA and, 684â87, 698, 701
offers to go to Europe for Red Cross, 808
ombudsman talents belong to GIs, 834â37
organizes campaign, Farley's report concerning, 559
other tickets considered, 783, 785
outraged over State Department reorganization, 909â10, 912
and party for black delinquent girls, 561â62
and patronage of Second World Youth Congress, 695â97
patronizes civic organizations, 585
Pearl Buck's attitude toward, 863â64
Pearl Harbor and, 823â25
and “petticoat government” issue, 592â95
philosophy of living, 478
Poland invaded, her shifting views, 742â43
political considerations do not silence her, 668
Popular Front turnabout, 760
on possibility of a woman president, 489
practicality of, 484
prefab houses inadequate, 505â6
presses for Landis appointment, 826
pressures Franklin on home-front issues, 812â14
prevents NAACP from picketing DAR, 668
and problems with Farley, 553â56
projects federalized, 504
and prospect of Franklin's fourth term, 902
public-service-employment concept and, 686
and public speaking, 526â27, 531â33
public vs. private life, 597â99
pushes conference idea, 727
quits Youth Congress over Geneva meeting resolutions, 776â77
racist attacks on, southern rumor factory, 856
and
Reader's Digest
article controversy, 857
as “realistic pacifist,” 705
realizes change in Franklin, 913
rearranges Sara's Hyde Park room, 891
and refugees' plight, her work for rescue agencies, 809â11
regrets Franklin's Youth Congress speech, 773
relationship with Bethune, 661â62
relationship with Franklin, her influence on him, 575â77
relationship with Missy, Franklin and, 640â44, 645
relationship with Pauli Murray, 662â63
relations with State Department, Summer Welles' appointment and, 726â27
relationship with Tommy, Val-Kill lifestyle, 605â9
relationship with Tugwell, 513â20, 521
relations with the homesteaders, 512
relieved war does not follow Rhineland invasion, 715
as reluctant mailman between Franklin and Earl Browder, 895â98
reports to Franklin on government-agency directors, 581
and Republican exploitation of her contacts with blacks, 657â59
Republicans make issue of First Lady's role, 563
resettlement-administration channels bypassed by, 516
resigns from DAR, 665â66
resigns OCD post, 830â31
resumes radio talks (1934), 525â26
reunions with children, 612â13
revolutionary aspects of, 478, 481â82
on role of federal government and youth unemployment, 682
role of in Wallace nomination (1940), 779
rural-industrial community impossible, 517
Sara's death and, 818
seeks New Deal support in leftist organizations, 755
sees future implication of racial struggle, 678
sense of humor about self, 629
and sense of spiritual mission, 490
severs connections with Todhunter, 602, 603
and Sinclair's EPIC program, 484
and skit contrasting her with cousin Alice, 537
social affairs of, her control over, 634â35
and social-security-bill issue, 551â52
southern ties of, 660â61