Her Day: Eleanor Roosevelt turns 134 | 10/4/2018

Black and white photo of Eleanor Roosevelt
Eleanor Roosevelt by Yousuf Karsh, 1944, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of Estrellita Karsh in memory of Yousuf Karsh© Estate of Yousuf Karsh

We recognize the role of first lady as it exists today because of Eleanor Roosevelt. A compassionate and smart woman with an activist spirit, she was not content to just entertain others and serve her husband domestically. She was a public servant intent on sharing her voice with the world in order to do good.

As young as 5 years old, Eleanor Roosevelt recalls volunteering, sometimes with her father serving Thanksgiving dinner or “dressing” the Christmas trees at the Post-graduate hospital with her grandmother. Around 1903, after Eleanor returned from Allenswood Girl’s Academy in London, she became a volunteer investigator for The Consumer’s League, a reform agency investigating poor labor conditions. She visited tenements and publicized the dangerous and unsanitary conditions of workers in New York City.

Only a few years later in 1905 she was married to distant cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. She focused on her family life, raising her children with plenty of help from her very involved mother-in-law. In 1917 as the US entered World War I, women across America saw a change in their daily lives. For Eleanor Roosevelt, it meant she was able to return to volunteer work for the first time since she had been married. She volunteered with the Red Cross and visited wounded naval soldiers regularly.

When polio paralyzed her husband in 1921, Roosevelt gained even more autonomy. She became active while her husband went on a seven-year political hiatus. She led organizations  such as the League of Women Voters, the Women’s Trade Union League, the Women’s City Club, and the Women‘s Division of the New York State Democratic Committee. During this time, she was also writing, lecturing and getting involved in radio broadcasting.

Full-length drawing of Eleanor Roosevelt in black
Eleanor Roosevelt by Charles Johnson Post, 1940, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

In 1933, she became First Lady of the United States and feared the change it would bring to her life. She did not care much for the formality of political life in Washington, DC. Immediately she begun to help those affected by the Great Depression. She held press conferences for only women reporters so that if big publishers wanted to feature news from the White House, they would need to employ women at their agencies. She was a civil rights activist and advocated for equality in the New Deal programs. In 1935, she started writing the newspaper column “My Day” which served as a platform for her to discuss politics and social issues throughout her life until 1962.

A year after her husband’s death in 1945, Eleanor Roosevelt became a delegate to the United Nations where she helped create the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. Though no longer First Lady of the United States, she became First Lady of the World.

Born on this day in 1884, Happy Birthday to a woman who re-defined what it means to be a leading lady. Wish Ms. Roosevelt a happy birthday in our exhibitions 20th Century Americans: 1930-1960 and Struggle for Justice.

 

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First Ladies