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Franklin Delano Roosevelt, born in Hyde
Park, New York, on January 30th, 1882; died
in Warm Springs, Georgia, on April 12th,
1945. Lawyer, 32nd President of the United
States of America.
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President Franklin
D. Roosevelt (sitting, left),
Governor General of Canada Lord
Athlone (sitting, right), Prime
Minister W.L. Mackenzie King
(standing, left) and British
Prime Minister Winston Churchill
(standing, right) at the Quebec
Conference in August 1943
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| National
Film Board / National Archives
of Canada, C-029466 |
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Born in a wealthy family, Franklin Roosevelt
was brought up in Hyde Park, New York. He
studied law at Harvard from 1900 to 1904,
and at the Columbia University Law School,
from which he graduated in 1907 to join
the Bar of the State of New York.
Roosevelt entered public life in 1910,
being elected to the state Senate of New
York as a Democrat. Between 1913 and 1920,
the young lawyer served as Assistant Secretary
of the Navy. In 1920, he ran as the Democrats'
vice-presidential candidate, with Ohio Governor
James M. Cox for president. They were defeated
by the Republican ticket, Warren Harding
and Calvin Coolidge.
In August 1921, Roosevelt learned he had
poliomyelitis. Through the practice of swimming,
the therapeutic effects of the waters from
Warm Springs, Georgia, and his own perseverance
he managed to avoid paralysis. From then
on, he had to spend several months every
year at the Warm Springs thermal station,
that a foundation created by Roosevelt was
to transform into a poliomyelitis treatment
centre.
Back into politics in 1928, Roosevelt was
elected Governor of the State of New York.
During his second term, which started in
1930, he gathered around him a group of
professors from Columbia University to find
solutions to the economic depression that
plagued the country. He launched social
welfare and economic revitalization programmes
that made him one of the most progressive
state governors in the U.S.
Roosevelt ran in the presidential elections
for the Democrats and was elected in 1932,
as the Depression was at its worst. He rapidly
implemented a series of legislative measures
to counter the economic trends. He offered
the American people the "New Deal",
a programme to restructure public finances,
industry, agriculture and natural resources,
combined with the creation of new federal
agencies that would provide sizeable amounts
of fresh money for public interest projects.
Roosevelt often used the airwaves for reassuring
chats with the American public, during which
he discussed current issues and the solutions
put forward by his administration. Despite
unavoidable dissent and controversies, he
was re-elected for a second term in 1936.
As Europe and Asia were engulfed in violence,
Roosevelt condemned aggression between nations
and refused to share the isolationist views
that resulted in the adoption by the U.S.
Congress in 1935 of the Neutrality
Act. Despite the limitations
created by this legislation, the President
increased defence expenditures to prepare
the country in case of war. Shortly after
his 1940 re-election, he implemented conscription
to ensure protection against a potential
Japanese aggression. Early on he advocated
supporting Great Britain and Canada in their
war efforts against nazi Germany. In that
context, a few months after the fall of
France, he met with Canadian Prime Minister
W.L.
Mackenzie King. The two men agreed
on a joint defence plan for North America,
to be managed by the Permanent Joint Board
on Defence. The Canadian Prime Minister
also facilitated negotiations between Roosevelt
and Churchill regarding the delivery of
destroyers in exchange for the use of naval
bases and the lease of military equipment
to the Allies fighting against the Third
Reich.
In December 1941, the United States went
to war against Japan and Germany. Roosevelt
engaged in intense diplomatic activity to
maintain the cohesion between the U.S.,
Great Britain, the USSR and China. He took
part in a series of international conferences,
in Casablanca (January 1943), Quebec City
(August 1943), Tehran (November-December
1943) and Yalta (February 1945), during
which Allied leaders agreed to keep on fighting
until the final and unconditional surrender
of Germany and Japan. In Yalta, the Allies
secretly designed the partition of Germany
into occupation zones under their control.
During those conferences, Roosevelt was
a passionate advocate of the creation of
an international organization, the United
Nations.
Suffering from major blood pressure and
heart problems, Franklin D. Roosevelt was
not to see the end of the war; he passed
away at his Warm Springs residence on April
12th, 1945.
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