- Back to Home »
- Survive »
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
Posted by : xtreme.pull
সোমবার, ১৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১৫
Franklin D. Roosevelt
On August 14, 1935, Franklin D. Roosevelt signed The Social Security Act into law. To remember FDR, who profoundly changed America with his New Deal programs, we’re taking a look at some fascinating facts about his life and legacy.
From the Great Depression to World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
guided the United States through challenging times. He sought to help
the American people in many different ways, including creating social
safety nets for the elderly and the unemployed. In 1935, FDR signed the
Social Security Act to provide aid to the country's most senior citizens
and others in need.
FDR considered the Social
Security Act to be one of his greatest accomplishments. In a 1934
speech to Congress, he said that "I place the security of the men,
women and children of the Nation first." FDR believed that the American
people deserved "some safeguard against misfortunes which cannot be
wholly eliminated in this man-made world of ours." He accomplished this
goal with the creation of Social Security. Let's learn more about the
man behind these impressive achievements.
1. FDR had a half-brother. He
was the only child of Sara Delano and James Roosevelt, but he was not,
however, his father's only child. James did have a much older son, also
named James, from his first marriage to Rebecca Brien Howland. FDR's
brother, nicknamed "Rosy," was born in 1854—the same year as FDR's
mother.
By the time FDR was born in 1882, Rosy
was already grown up and had a family. He had married into another of
America's leading families when Rosy wed Helen Astor in 1877. FDR and
Rosy's daughter Helen and son James were even close in age. He played
with them when Rosy's family visited Springwood, the family's estate in
Hyde Park, New York.
2. Collecting stamps was a nearly lifelong passion for FDR. He
started up with this hobby around the age of 8. FDR's mother encouraged
this activity, having been a collector herself as a child. When FDR
contracted polio in 1921, he turned to his stamps as a distraction
during his bedridden days. In fact, he once said that "I owe my life to
my hobbies—especially stamp collecting."
In the
White House, FDR found working on his collection a form of stress
relief from the demands of his presidency. He even had the State
Department send over envelopes it received so that he review the stamps.
FDR took an active role in the creation of new stamps as well. He
approved more than 200 new stamps during his time in office.
3. FDR dropped out of law school. His
undergrad studies seemed to be a piece of cake for him. He only took
him three years to earn a bachelor's degree in history from Harvard. FDR
then enrolled at Columbia University's school. But he abandoned his
legal studies in 1907 after he passed his bar exam. FDR only practiced
for a few years before jumping into politics. In 1910, he won his first
election to the New York State Senate.
4. For FDR, love was a family affair. He married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, his fifth cousin once removed, on March 17, 1905. Eleanor was the niece of another of FDR's distant relatives, President Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt. President Roosevelt actually walked Eleanor down the aisle at her wedding to FDR, filling in for Eleanor's late father.
5. FDR's first attempt at winning a national office was a flop. FDR
won the Democratic nomination for vice president in 1920 with James M.
Cox, governor of Ohio, as the party's presidential pick. The pair lost
out to Republican Warren Harding and his running mate Calvin Coolidge.
Their victory was a decisive one, with Harding taking roughly 60
percent of the popular vote and roughly 76 percent of the electoral
votes.
When running for president himself, FDR
would score several substantial wins of his own. The 1936 election was
perhaps his greatest victory, picking up roughly 98 percent of the
electoral votes. His opponent, Republican Alfred M. Landon, only won two
states, Maine and Vermont.
6. FDR made history when he appointed Frances Perkins to his cabinet in 1933.
Selected as secretary of labor, Perkins became the first woman to hold a
cabinet post in a U.S. presidential administration. She was
instrumental in helping Roosevelt with many of his programs, including
Social Security. This was the second time FDR had tapped Perkins for a
government post. As governor of New York, he picked her to be the
state's labor commissioner.
7. FDR holds the record for the longest-serving American president.
In 1944, FDR was elected to his fourth term. And no one can ever
challenge this feat. In 1951, the 22nd Amendment was passed, which
limited future presidents to only two terms. The amendment states that
“No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than
twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as
President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person
was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President
more than once.”