American History
Related: About this forumThe Death of President Roosevelt, April 12, 1945
- Unfinished portrait of FDR by artist Elizabeth Shoumatoff (1888-1980), April 12, 1945.
- Roosevelt House, Public Policy Institute at Hunter College.
President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, 76 years ago. He had been inaugurated on January 20th for his fourth term as president, an unprecedented feat never to be repeated. He was only 63 years old but his health had been undermined with many conditions very high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, possibly melanoma that today might have been ameliorated with medication. He was weakened by post-polio syndrome and the enormous stresses of 12 years of overseeing the nations recovery from the Great Depression and heading up the wartime coalition to defeat the Germans, Japanese and their allies.
FDR succumbed to a cerebral hemorrhage (stroke) while taking a restful break at Warm Springs, Georgia, the polio treatment center he had created in the late 1920s. On his prior visits, he had always come away feeling rejuvenated from the warm air, the warm water where he was able to move without assistance, and the warm camaraderie he enjoyed with the patients, young and old. He was stricken at his home, the so-called Little White House, while sitting for his portrait and chatting with friends. He never regained consciousness. His wife of 40 years, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, was in Washington, and once informed she flew to Warm Springs. Though this was terrible blow, she later wrote in her autobiography, somehow you had no chance to think of it as a personal sorrow. It was the sorrow of all those to whom this man who now lay dead, and who happened to be my husband, had been a symbol of strength and fortitude.
- Little White House Sign
- FDR built this compact house in 1932 when he was Governor of New York.
Mrs. Roosevelt traveled back to Washington in the train bearing FDRs coffin, and lay in my berth all night with the window shade up, looking out at the countryside he loved and watching the faces of the people at stations, and even at the crossroads. who came to pay their last tribute all through the night. Just as Lincolns funeral cortege had borne his remains back to Illinois with so many grateful Americans by the tracks acknowledging how he had saved the Union, so it was for crowds honoring FDR for saving democracy, and saving the world from dictatorship and horror. He had also laid the groundwork for the United Nations to prevent another world war.
After a funeral service at the White House, his casket traveled again by train for a short service and final interment in the rose garden at Springwood, his home in Hyde Park, New York, on April 15, 1945. In her newspaper column several days later, Mrs. Roosevelt paid tribute to FDR:
While my husband was in Albany [as Governor] and for some years after coming to Washington, his chief interest was in seeing that the average human being was given a fairer chance for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That was what made him always interested in the problems of minority groups and of any group which was at a disadvantage. As the war clouds gathered and the inevitable involvement of this country became more evident, his objective was always to deal with the problems of the war, political and military, so that eventually an organization might be built to prevent future wars . a leader may chart the way, may point out the road to lasting peace, but that many leaders and many peoples must do the building. It cannot be the work of one man, nor can the responsibility be laid upon his shoulders, and so, when the time comes for peoples to assume the burden more fully, he is given rest. God grant that we may have the wisdom and courage to build a peaceful world with justice and opportunity for all peoples the world over...
http://www.roosevelthouse.hunter.cuny.edu/exhibits/death-president-roosevelt-april-12-1945/
- FDR and Mrs. Roosevelt with children at Warm Springs.
- FDR casket in the East Room of the White House, April 14, 1945.
- The "Big Three" at the Yalta Conference in Crimea, Feb. 4-11, 1945. Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin. Behind them stand, from the left, Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke, Fleet Admiral Ernest King, Fleet Admiral William D. Leahy, General of the Army George Marshall, Major General Laurence S. Kuter, General Aleksei Antonov, Vice Admiral Stepan Kucherov, and Admiral of the Fleet Nikolay Kuznetsov. The Yalta Conference, also known as the Crimea Conference and codenamed Argonaut, was the World War II meeting of the heads of government of the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union to discuss the postwar reorganization of Germany and Europe. .
The aim of the conference was to shape a postwar peace that represented not only a collective security order but also a plan to give self-determination to the liberated peoples of Europe. Intended mainly to discuss the re-establishment of the nations of war-torn Europe, within a few years, with the Cold War dividing the continent, the conference became a subject of intense controversy...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalta_Conference
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,748 posts)leading up to the anniversary of Roosevelt's death.
https://twitter.com/BeschlossDC
Thanks.
appalachiablue
(42,863 posts)Omnipresent
(6,285 posts)Out about FDRs death. Using the timeline of the call made to him to come to the Whitehouse.
After arriving and hearing the news, Truman had unknowingly been President for more than an hour.
appalachiablue
(42,863 posts)Michael Beschloss' Twitter feed photos- Harry Truman, president of 13 days in FDR's old car at the opening of the new United Nations in San Fran., April 25, 1945.
BigmanPigman
(52,216 posts)who liberated the Nazi camps at the end of the war they always mention the date when FDR died and how it affected the troops.
appalachiablue
(42,863 posts)he did, but he knew the outcome. A remarkable president and leader. Thanks for mentioning this and earlier George Stevens who did a great job filming the final weeks of the war in Europe esp. the Liberation of Dachau.
BigmanPigman
(52,216 posts)and gave me an FDR Christmas tree ornament commemorating him which she got on her last visit to DC.
One of the things that was obvious in Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books was the anti-FDR bias. Her daughter co-wrote them with her and she was a strong Libertarian (up there with Ayn Rand). In her own writing she constantly wrote about how horrible FDR and his social programs were bad for the US. In true hypocritical fashion both she and her mother and their family took advantage of tons of FDR's programs yet they proclaim that they survived on their own.