Friday, November 8, 2019
Franklin D. Roosevelt Essays - Delano Family, Livingston Family
Franklin D. Roosevelt Essays - Delano Family, Livingston Family    Franklin D. Roosevelt      On January 30, 1882 in Hyde Park, New York Franklin Delano Roosevelt was born.  James Roosevelt,   Franklin's father, was a prosperous railroad official and landowner(Lawson 25). His  predecessors, when they came from   the Netherlands, were succes Roosevelt learned from private tutors, not going to school  until the age of fourteen. He had   already studied German, Latin and French by the time he had started school(Freidel 6).  Sailing, bird hunting and stamp   collecting were among his hobbies. On his In 1896, at the age of fourteen his parents  sent him away to Groton,   Massachusetts, to a private, boys only, boarding school. He was not very popular  among the students, but was   respected by his peers and was never the object of pranks pulled by the ol From there,  Roosevelt went on to enter   Harvard in 1900. There too Roosevelt remained an average student, making it through  with a C average most of the   time(Hacker 19). At Harvard, his social activities took preference over his academic  pursuit and the In 1903 Roosevelt   graduated from Harvard and entered the Columbia Law School. He dropped out in his  third year after passing the New   York bar examination(Hacker 24). Soon after, Roosevelt started practicing law with a  New York law firm.   While still in law school, Roosevelt met Anna Eleanor Roosevelt a distant cousin, only a  few years younger than   him(Alsop 28). They were married on St. Patrick's day, March 17th, 1905(Freidel 13).  He was twenty-three and she   was twenty-one. Her fathe A few years later in 1910, Roosevelt accepted the  Democratic nomination for the New York   State Senate(Freidel 17). He won the elections, and in the following January he entered  the Senate at the young age of   twenty-eight(Freidel 18). Later in 1912 he ra In July of 1921, while vacationing at  Campobello Island, he went sailing   with his children. One day, they saw, what appeared to be a forest fire, on a nearby  island they quickly sailed to shore to   help put out the fire. It took a couple of hours and w was able to walk in the pool  unaided. His disease, poliomyelitis, had   affected him on land but in the water he was as quick as anyone. In 1926 he bought  Warm Springs for $200,000(Hacker   40). In 1927 he contributed two-thirds of his wealth(Freidel 47) a His physical  disabilities didn't hinder his climb of the   political ladder. In 1928 Roosevelt ran for governor of New York and won the election  with a large margin. One of his   main goals was that the state should own the electric companies and other util In October  of 1929, when Roosevelt was   still Governor, the stock market suddenly collapsed. This caused nation-wide panic.  Grain and cotton prices dropped   tremendously due to an overabundant supply, and many farmers were out of jobs.  Rapidly, people w Roosevelt did not   run for the presidency in 1928 because that year, most of the country was in favor of a  Republican candidate for   president. Four years later in 1932, a week before his fiftieth birthday, Roosevelt  announced his candidacy for president   Through his campaign speeches he preached of a 'New Deal' for the American people,  one that would lift them out of the   depression. Now he was going to fulfill his promise. Roosevelt did not sit back and  watch the country take itself out of a   depression. uests would be permitted to reopen and those that couldn't, wouldn't. Banks  that couldn't meet withdrawals   requests would, together with federal aid, meet the withdrawal demands(Lawson 48). Of  the nineteen thousand banks,   only about twenty-four hundred Like he said in campaign speeches, If I were elected  President, my first step would be   to mobilize the country for war on unemployment(Woolf). This is exactly what he  started to do. Another main bill passed   in the hundred days was the Civilian Conserv He also signed into law one of the most  important laws that today helps   back up our bank system. Until that time there was no insurance to cover for banks that  went bankrupt or collapsed. The   Banking Act of 1933 changed all of this. The government put a He also accomplished  many things which greatly boosted   the economy. He reduced the 1934 federal budget by 13%. Although he often spoke  that the American Navy and   Marines should be the best in the world, he was not hesitant in cutting the 1934 defense  bud On August 14, 1935 he   signed into    
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