PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 06/24/1931 - HFSID 48378
Price: $900.00
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Franklin D. Roosevelt sends a typed letter saying that he has written
the letter of recommendation.
Typed Letter Signed: "Franklin D. Roosevelt" as Governor of
New York, 1p, 8x10½. Executive Chamber, Albany, 1931 June 24. To
Robert Cushman Murphy, D. Sc., American Museum of Natural History, New York
City, New York. In full: "Pleases excuse me for not answering your
note before this. I have been very glad to write to the Century Association in
behalf of Francis B. Riggs. Very sincerely yours," Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1882-1945, born in Hyde Park, NY) is an American politician who served
as president during two of the most difficult times in world history, the Great
Depression and World War II. He also served as president for four terms
(1933-1945), longer than any other president in history. Roosevelt's parents
were from old New York families, and he was raised in privilege. Theodore,
his fifth cousin, was elected president in 1902; his leadership style and lust
for reform made him Franklin's hero and role model. Roosevelt was elected to
the New York State Senate in 1910; he ran as a Democrat in a district that
hadn't elected a Democrat since 1884, but ran on his privileged name and rode a
Democratic landslide to the State Senate, where he joined reformers in opposing
New York City's Tammany Hall Democratic machine. He resigned in 1913 when
appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy (1913-1920), where he worked to
expand the Navy and founded the Navy Reserve and where he met Winston Churchill
for the first time in 1918. He ran as vice president with James M. Cox of Ohio,
but they were handily defeated by Warren Harding. He contracted a paralytic
illness in 1921 while vacationing in Campobello Island, New Brunswick, widely
believed to be poliomyelitis, which permanently paralyzed him from the waist
down. Not many people knew at the time that he was paralyzed, though, thanks
in part to a cooperative press. He was elected Governor of New York
(1928-1932), a governorship that was marred by his reluctant deal-making
with the faltering Tammany Hall machine during his 1930 re-election run. He
was elected president in 1932, three years into the worldwide Great Depression,
a depression that contributed to the rise of Adolf Hitler. Roosevelt
tried to get people back to work with the New Deal and prevent the same thing
happening in the United States. The New Deal was a patchwork of programs
that scholars now agree had limited success at best in ending the Depression,
and some of its programs, like the National Recovery Administration (NRA), were
determined to be unconstitutional. However, programs like the Civilian
Conservation Corps employed hundreds of thousands of Americans and programs like
NRA and the Tennessee Valley Authority injected billions of federal dollars into
the economy. Roosevelt was also responsible for Social Security benefits
for the elderly and minimum wage laws. He began re-arming the United States
in 1938, in the face of strong isolationism, and declared that the United
States would become an "arsenal of democracy" against Hitler. But the
isolationism dissolved with the attacks on Pearl Harbor, and the United States
entered World War II. Roosevelt's administration put the nation on a war
footing while coordinating strategy with his counterparts Churchill and Josef
Stalin, the so-called "Big Three". He died four months before V-J Day and
the official end of World War II on Aug. 12, 1945. FDR was campaigning for
the nomination for President against fellow Democrats including Al Smith and
John Nance Garner. At the convention in Chicago (June 27-July 2, 1932), FDR
was nominated on the fourth ballot. In the November 8th election, Roosevelt
defeated incumbent President Herbert Hoover 472-59 electoral votes, winning
Kansas and 41 other states. Fold creases not near signature. Fine
condition.
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