Read Eleanor and Franklin Online
Authors: Joseph P. Lash
Southwest Pacific tour of, 865, 868â81
Spain and Munich do not convince her on use of force, 726
stands against segregation at Southern Conference on Human Welfare, 665
Steve Early knees policeman, 673
still prods Franklin, 912
success as newspaper columnist, 533â39
and suggestions for business community, 590â91
supports 1936 Emergency Peace Campaign, 713â14
supports Spanish loyalists, 720â25
supposed Communist sympathies of, 747â48
talks before delinquent girls and women, 528â29
talks with GIs, sees Maj. Evans Carlson, 834
thrust at Franklin about Uncle Teddy, 643
with Tiny on campaign train, 599
transference of homesteads to Tugwell, 513
trip home of, 850
trips to China and Russia vetoed, 865, 867
trip to Britain of, 836â50
trusted by Washington's black community, 647
understands mood of Negro youth, backs Richard Wright, 663
and UNRRA conference, Franklin's food program, 883
urges Franklin to be patient with Congress, 550
Val-Kill Industries dissolved, 601
victory in the making, Republican scare tactics, 564â65
views on accomplishing reforms, 550
views on campaign speeches, 566
views on Communism in early White House years, 744
views on Democratic process, 567
views on marriage, 618
views on misallocation of government funds in South, 649
views on sanctions, 711
views on the CCC and universal youth service, 680, 683, 700â701
views on white domination and postwar world organization, 852, 853
visits with European royalty, 846, 847
and volunteer-service idea, 680
and Wagner Housing Act passage, 585
and Wallace-Jones RFC fight, 913â14
wants to attend summit conferences, 882, 883
wants women included in New Deal, 486, 489â90
and Washington, D.C., social-welfare institutions, 579â80
and Washington sit-down demonstration, 694, 697
Westbrook Pegler challenges credentials of, 538â39
West Coast tour of, 823â25
and White House Christmas, Franklin's summit-conferences report, 884
White House menus on dull side, 633
white-supremacy issue raised over Casablanca, 860â61
and women at Democratic convention, 556â57
on women leadership, 489
works for OCD, 815â18, 821â31
and work for women in administration, 584
works while Franklin away, 917â19
and World Court issue, 706â10
worries about Franklin, 913
writes autobiography, 540â45
writes “If I Were a Negro,” 857â58
and Yalta conference, 913, 915
youth as messengers of the future, her pleas for, 698
see also
Roosevelt, Anna Hall; Roosevelt, Elliott; Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Elfrida, 114
Roosevelt, Elliott (father), 44, 45â46, 112, 135, 141, 154, 181, 221, 605
adjudged insane, 46â47
advises daughter on education, 60
and anti-Semitism, 30â31
bent on self-destruction, 3
birth and family background of, 3â7
bouts of depression of, 23â24
and
Britannic
collision, 35
calls Eleanor a coward, 44
childhood and youth of, 6â11
and courtship and marriage to Anna Hall, 21â25
death of, 68â69
and deaths of mother and Alice Lee Roosevelt, 29
devoted to Eleanor, 34â35
and Eleanor's childhood reading memories, 53
Eleanor's great love, “sportsman,” 3
and Eleanor's letters to prior to his death, 66â67
and Elliott Jr.'s illness and death, 62, 63
erratic behavior of, 65
escapades and drinking sprees of, 35
European trip of, placed in sanitarium, 42â47
expedition to India of, 13â16
and father's illness and death, 12â13
fractured ankle of, trip to South due to, 39, 41
gives Eleanor pony, 62
his French mistress on, 47
income and lifestyle of, 26, 28â29
influence on Eleanor's life, 3
is full of large plans, 29
is heavy drinker, has “epicurean” appetites, 13
last letters of, 68
letter to Eleanor on eight birthday, 53â54
not allowed to rejoin children, 63
not cured, drinking worsens, 42
political views of, 31
in real-estate business, 17, 26
returns to N.Y., gives up children, 56â57
returns to States, life at Hempstead House, 37â38
Roosevelt and Hall households compared, 20
and secret understanding, with Eleanor, 57
and separation from family, 49â51
social skills and popularity of, 13, 15, 17, 26, 27â28
stands by Theodore's political activities, 31
tone of correspondence with Eleanor, 58, 64
trip to Europe resumed, 36
undertakes Keeley cure, 49
visits Eleanor, Knickerbocker Club incident, 64
and wife's illness and death, 55â56
wife's pregnancy, Eleanor's birth and, 29
see also
Roosevelt, Anna Hall
Roosevelt, Elliott, Jr. (brother), 39, 42, 43, 45, 51, 62
Roosevelt, Elliott (son), 312, 341, 364, 370â71, 392, 394, 401, 427, 432, 436, 437, 438, 443, 465, 472, 536, 543, 567, 618, 622, 626, 784, 792, 793, 801, 839, 843, 848, 884
birth of, 203, 207
burns self while mother away, 239â40
divorces Ruth, 887
rushes into marriage, 429
in uniform after Pearl Harbor, 824, 832
upbringing and education of, 236â44
passim
, 297
Roosevelt, Emlen, 31, 114, 171
Roosevelt, Ethel, 919
Roosevelt, Franklin, Jr. (1st son):
birth of, 199
illness and death of, 202â4
Roosevelt, Franklin, Jr. (2nd son), 179, 247, 296â97, 341, 364, 369, 370, 401, 463, 465, 612, 613, 616â17, 621, 627, 673, 792, 793, 795, 800, 801, 805, 806, 890
and Christmas party for children of WTUL members, 349â50
and European trip with mother, 410, 411, 414â16
Franklin wants to attend summit conferences with, 884
and philosophies-of-government discussion, 533â34
resents Missy, 641
on Sara's manipulation of grandchildren, 364
ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN DELANO, 22, 34, 112, 113, 123, 156, 158, 159, 163, 164, 191, 192, 193, 195, 361, 362, 369, 370, 371, 373, 374, 375, 376, 383, 413â14, 415, 426, 427, 454, 460, 462, 468, 530, 539, 540, 577, 578, 580, 581, 599, 600, 609â11, 614, 615, 733, 739, 754, 765, 807, 835, 838, 844, 849, 850, 860, 870, 874, 880
acceptance by social elite important to, 232
acceptance speech of, 557
achievements during first one hundred days, 473
and Admiral Byrd's and Sir George Paish's suggestions, 718
against Josephus Daniels' pacifism, 246â47
aids Eleanor in League of Women Voters' work, 323â25
and aid-to-Finland issue, 768, 770
aligns with Wilson movement, 216â17
all interests subordinate to his, reticence of, 430
anti-New Deal Congress forces him further left, 755
and Arthurdale address, 523
Arthurdale his idea, 495
asks Anna to White House, 891â92
and attack on Eleanor at OCD, 831
attempts to negotiate with Hitler and Mussolini are rejected, 736â37
attends Theodore's inauguration, 170â71
attitude toward Bernard Baruch, 509
attitude toward Dies Committee, 740
Baruch's advice to, 591
becomes assistant secretary of the Navy, 224â25
becomes ill, Howe manages re-election campaign, 218â19
and beginning of Cuff Links Club, 319
bids for the presidency, victory of, 422â25, 429, 432â37, 438, 443
birth and childhood of, 144â46
birthday parties of, 633
and bout with polio, 331â43, 363
builds own house at Hyde Park, 611
and campaign and election, 312â18, 799â806
cannot bear to have real discussions, 912
and Caribbean inspection tour, 253
character traits of, influences on, 144â50
and Chatauqua speech, 544
n
and child-refugee issue, 732, 733, 809, 810, 811
closest advisers resent Eleanor, 432
confers with Mme. Chiang Kai-shek, 862
confers with world powers, 866
congratulates Eleanor on convention role, 795
and conscription and tax-bill issues, 796â98
considers selling houseboat, 366
in contact with Earl Browder, 895â98
and convention, 788â95
converts to women's suffrage, 213
and Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill, 651â56
and
Crimson
as preparation for public life, 148
cruises to Campobello, 558
deals with Congress conservative coalition, war-before-reform speech, 886
death and funeral of, 919â23
decides to run for third term, 779, 780, 781, 782â84, 787
declines to speak for NAACP, 668
defends Eleanor's food-saving program, 258
Democratic convention in Houston, 392â93, 395
Democratic prospects bad, 309, 312
and Detroit racial riot (1943), 857
dislikes disciplining children, 241
dissatisfied with White House menus, 633â34
and early summer trip through N.Y., cultivates rural areas, 412
economic views of, 698â99
educational effect of Joint Legislative Conference on, 386
effect of Wilson years on, 226
Eleanor carries out political strategy of, 346
and Eleanor's attitude toward New Deal, 481
and Eleanor's autobiography, 541, 542, 543, 544
and Eleanor's estrangement from Nancy Cook and Marion Dickerman, 602, 603â4
and Eleanor's hope for change in their relationship, 421â22, 429, 430â31
and Eleanor's increased political activity, 356â57
Eleanor's influence on issues, 592â96
and Eleanor's involvement in Bok Peace Award controversy, 351â53
and Eleanor's involvement with Emergency Peace Campaign, 713â15
and Eleanor's Latin American tour, 887â88
and Eleanor's letter from Australia, 875
and Eleanor's ombudsman duties, 417â18
and Eleanor's pacifist views, 705
and Eleanor's radio-talks issue, 525â26
Eleanor's visits to on houseboat, 364â65
Eleanor in tears over 65th St. house, 197
Eleanor visits as child, 34
election returns and victory of, 567â68
at end of Wilson years, nominated for vice president, 269, 308â10
enjoys and admires, Hall Roosevelt, 200
establishes OCD, 814
and Esther Lape's fight for social health legislation, 586â88
and European developments and third-term considerations, 785, 786, 787
and exclusion of China from Casablanca conference, 860â61
and Farley's resignation, 799
and feud with Oyster Bay clan, 644
first vote Republican, 170â71
follow-through on quarantine speech, 726
found of Campobello, 165
and fourth-term prospect, Eleanor and, 902
as front runner of Democratic presidential hopefuls (1930), 421, 422
future-of-Germany issue, 905
goes to France to be with Sara, 432
goes to Warm Springs, 916
and “great design” for peace, 717
at Groton, 147â48
he and Eleanor a team, 418, 435
hires Marguerite LeHand, 319
and Hitler's invasion of Poland, 743
Howe compared to Hopkins, 638
and Howe's illness and death, 546â48
and Hyde Park lifestyle during 1930s, 609â11
illness of, 885, 889â91, 903, 904, 906
impatient with Congress, 550
impatient with New Dealers, 639
and inauguration day, 450â52
independent and self-reliant, 149
as insurgent during Sheehan-designation fight, 210â12
interested in and courts Eleanor, 124â37, 150, 152â61, 162â69
invasion of Europe, 894
irritated by Eleanor and young people, 768
is accomplished politician, Eleanor learns from, 646
isolationists still tie hands of, 737, 740â41
key man in 1912 legislature, 215
learns of trade-union movement through Eleanor's WTUL friends, 350
looks forward to summer in Campobello (1921), 328
and Lucy Mercer affair, 270â79, 293
Lucy Mercer visits, 893
and Madison Square Garden speech, 565â66
Marian Anderson concert and, 667, 668
and MetLab-nuclear-research issue, 898â902
mutes support of League of Nations despite Wilsonian ideals, 350
and naval rearmament, suspicious of Japan, 705
Nazi-Soviet Pact, Danzig crisis, 741
and Negroes-in-armed-services issue, 669â72, 673
and Negro-exclusion-from-defense-industries issue, 674â77
neutrality laws not amended, 740
New Deal opposition grows, 548â50
New Deal racial stand of, 648, 659â60
1916 presidential campaign and, 251â52
and 1918 N.Y. Democratic primary, 266
and 1922 N.Y. State Democratic convention, 346
1928 gubernatorial nomination and campaign, 395â99
passim
and 1930 gubernatorial campaign, 419â20
and 1936 campaign plan, 553â55
1936 first campaign without Howe, 546
1940 campaign and, Negro vote in question, 672â73
and 1944 campaign, 903â7
“nonpolitical” tour of Democratic convention, 556
and notification ceremonies, 312
not popular at Groton or Harvard, 150
on OCD civilian participation, 815
Odell Waller's case and, 855
offers to write Eleanor's column, 536
opinion of Mme. Chiang, 864, 866