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'''Eleanor Roosevelt''' (1884-1962), reformer and First Lady of the US from 1933 to 1945 as wife of US President [[Franklin D Roosevelt]] who was president from 1933 to his death in 1945 This article is writen and copyright 2008 by Will Johnson, Professional Genealogist. This page is locked, if you'd like to comment on it, you may email me at [mailto:wjhonson@aol.com wjhonson@aol.com] Note: This article is not finished, I'm working on it. If you'd like to help, email me, and I will credit you for any help you bring. ==Childhood== <table><tr><td>Anna Eleanor Roosevelt was born 11 Oct 1884 in "her maternal grandmother's mansion overlooking the Hudson River, about a hundred miles north of New York City". (Farber, p 20). Eleanor was the daughter and eldest child of Elliot Roosevelt and his wife Anna Rebecca Livingston Ludlow Hall. Elliot's weakness for liquor made him ''persona non grata'' to his wife Rebecca, and Eleanor saw little of her father as she grew. In an 18 Aug 1891 ''New York Times'' article, Theodore Roosevelt, who would become President in 1900, petitioned the New York Supreme Court to have his brother Elliot declared insane and for a commission "...to legally pass upon his condition in order that a committee may be appointed to take charge of his person and estate....Three times he threatened to commit suicide." He was then currently in a private asylum in France. Other than Eleanor, Elliot and Anna had a son Paul born in 1890 and a baby born in June 1891. Eleanor's mother Rebecca died of a fever when Eleanor was seven, and Elliot followed her to the grave two years later. Eleanor was then placed in the custody of grandmother Hall until she was sent to school in England. Upon her return for her "society debut" she met again Franklin Delano Roosevelt her distant cousin, then in school at Harvard University.</td><td>http://www.oscars.org/press/pressreleases/images/051122_b.jpg</td></tr></table> <table><tr><td>http://www.firstladies.org/biographies/images/EleanorRoosevelt.jpg</td><td>Franklin Delano Roosevelt was born 30 Jan 1882 at Hyde Park, Dutchess County, [[New York]], to James Roosevelt (1828-1900) and his wife Sara Delano (1854-1941). Many people assume that the Roosevelt's met because of their shared Roosevelt surname and it ties, but they were very distant Roosevelt fifth-cousins. They actually met because Sara Delano and Anna Roosevelt '''Elliot's sister''' were best friends from before Sara's marriage to Elliot. When Franklin was born, Elliot Roosevelt was his godfather. The families then remained close because of this friendship, which eventually resulted in Franklin and Eleanor knowing each other somewhat as they grew.</td></tr></table> ==Marriage== Eleanor's uncle [[Theodore Roosevelt|Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt]] became US President in 1901. When on 17 Mar 1905 Franklin Roosevelt married Eleanor Roosevelt, it's been reported that Teddy who was present at the wedding, got more attention than the married couple. Franklin Roosevelt and Eleanor had six children: #Anna Eleanor "Sis" Roosevelt (1906-1975) who married three times [[Curtis Bean Dall]], John Boettiger, and Dr John Addison Halsted; #James Roosevelt (b. 1907) who married twice Elizabeth Cushing and Romelle Schneider; #a boy who was born in 1908 or 1909 and died "less than eight months old"; #Elliot "Bunny" Roosevelt (b. 1910) who married four times Elizabeth Donner, Ruth Googins, Faye Emerson and Minnewa Ross; #Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr (b. 1914) who married twice Ethel Dupont and Suzanne Perrin; #John Aspinwall Roosevelt (b. 1916) who married twice Anne Lindsay Clark and Irene Boyd McAlpin. The three eldest children were all born in New York City. Eleanor and Franklin lived on East 36th Street in "Murray Hill" a neighborhood of Manhattan. Franklin was finishing up his law schooling and then started in the law trade. Franklin's Roosevelt relatives also had a summer place at Campobello, [[Maine]] and this is where their fourth child Franklin Jr was born. About this time, Franklin made his political debut in the New York State Senate, and the family moved to Albany, the capital of New York. Shortly afterward, Franklin's support of US Presidential hopeful and then New Jersey governor [[Woodrow Wilson]] meant a rewarded Franklin was now Assistant Secretary of the Navy in the new Wilson administration, and the family moved again, this time to [[Washington DC]]. ==Volunteerism== About 1915, Eleanor discovered that Franklin had had an affair with her social secretary Lucy Mercer, and their own romatic relationship was said to have cooled or even ceased at that point. She offered him a divorce, but they did not. Eleanor devoted herself, during World War I to volunteer efforts which resulted in her becoming involved with the League of Women Voters, the Women's Trade Union League and the women's division of the New York State Democratic Committee. In 1920, Franklin had run unsuccessfully for the vice presidency. Some time later, he was attacked by polio. "Her part in helping her husband overcome the crippling effects of polio had yet to attract any widespread notice." (Farber, p. 72) It was while she was director of women's activities for the Democratic Committee that Eleanor met her soon-to-be long-time companion [[Lorena Hickok]], one day in Sep 1928. (Farber, p. 72) This was the year that Franklin ran for, and was elected governor of [[New York]]. At this time the Roosevelt's were living, at least part-time, in a township on East 65th in Manhattan, but then for the next four years, spent part of their time obviously in Albany at the state capital. ==1932== The 1932 Democratic party convention was held in Chicago. Eleanor and Franklin were not present, they were in Albany awaiting word that the party would choose Franklin to run for US President that year. Three ballots went and still there was no conclusive choice. Nancy Cook and Marion Dickerman however '''were''' there and when a letter arrived from Eleanor expressing her profound unhappiness about the possibility of Franklin being '''chosen''', they showed it to Louis Howe. Promptly destroying it, he ordered them never to mention the contents of that letter to anyone. (Farber, p. 86) Eleanor's son-in-law [[Curtis Bean Dall]] who had married Anna, relates an interesting story about how "Missouri came in early" for Roosevelt, due presumably to Curtis' intervention. Now the campaign began in earnest, with FDR, Eleanor and family on a cross-country train trip to shake hands and kiss babies. It was now that the relationship between Eleanor and [[Lorena Hickok]], a female journalist for AP, assigned to cover part of the Roosevelt story began to deepen. They had known each other, and of each other, in passing for several years, but never in close quarters. The confines of a long train-trip tend to make quick friends of acquaintances. Another relationship was forming on that cross-country train as well. Mrs. Anna Dall, the married daughter of FDR and Eleanor, met and fell in-love with journalist John Boettiger, assigned by the ''Chicago Tribune''. Some months later, she seperated from her husband Curtis, obtained a Nevada divorce and in early 1935 married Boettiger. In 1932, Franklin was handily elected US President and the family moved into the White House, in Washington, DC. ==Secondary Sources== ''The Life of Lorena Hickok, E.R.'s Friend'', by Doris Faber. William Morrow and Company, New York, 1980. ISBN 0688036317 ==See Also== [[Presidents of the United States]] [[Category:Famous Women]] [[Category:New York]] [[Category:Washington DC]]
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