Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum

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Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library
Official logo of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library.svg
FDR National Historic Site.JPG
Entrance To Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site
Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum is located in New York
Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum
Location in New York
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Hyde Park, New York, USA
Construction start 1939
Completion date 1940
Dedicated 30 June 1941
Named for Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Size 16 acres (6.5 ha)
Cost $376,000
Management National Archives and Records Administration
Website www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu

The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum is the first presidential library in the United States, built to hold the records of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the 32nd President of the United States (1933–1945). Located near Roosevelt's home in Hyde Park, New York, the library was built under his personal direction in 1939-1940. It is one of the thirteen presidential libraries under the auspices of the National Archives and Records Administration.

History

Built by Philadelphia contractor John McShain, it was constructed on 16 acres (6.5 ha) of land donated by the President and his mother, Sara Delano Roosevelt. The library resulted from the President's decision that a separate facility was needed to house the vast quantity of historical papers, books, and memorabilia he had accumulated during a lifetime of public service and private collecting.

Before the Library

Prior to Roosevelt's Presidency, the final disposition of Presidential papers was left to chance. Although a valued part of the nation's heritage, the papers of chief executives were private property which they took with them upon leaving office. Some were sold or destroyed and thus either scattered or lost to the nation forever. Others remained with families, but inaccessible to scholars for long periods of time.[1] The fortunate collections found their way into the Library of Congress and private repositories.

Roosevelt was the first to make his papers available to the public by donating them to the government.[1]:{{{3}}} In erecting his library, Roosevelt created an institution to preserve intact all his papers. These included papers from all his political offices, New York state senator (1911–13), assistant secretary of the Navy (1913-20), governor of New York (1929–32), and President of the United States (1933–45) and his private collections of papers, books, and memorabilia on the history of the U.S. Navy and Dutchess County, New York.

Location and buildings

File:Roosevelt study.jpg
FDR's study in the museum

The Library was overcrowded when finished, because Roosevelt did not expect to serve as president for more than two terms. A 1950 estimate stated that the library contained 50 million items, including 16,000 books, 15,000 photographs, 275,000 feet of movie film, and 300 sound recordings.[1]:{{{3}}} The building is built of Hudson Valley fieldstone in the style reminiscent of the local Dutch colonial architecture which he favored. A sketch made by President Roosevelt dated April 12, 1937, shows the proposed building placed on the grounds very close to the site ultimately chosen and a ground plan roughly approximating that of the main block today. He built it with privately donated funds, at a cost of $376,000 and then turned it over to the federal government on July 4, 1940 to be operated by the National Archives. By his actions, Roosevelt ensured that his papers would become the property of the nation and be housed in a library on the grounds of his Hyde Park estate where they would be available to scholars. Robert D.W. Connor, the Archivist of the United States at the time, said of the President, "Franklin D. Roosevelt is the nation's answer to the historian's prayer."

Other archives

In early planning for the Library the President expressed the hope that Eleanor Roosevelt's papers would eventually find a place here. In 1942 President Roosevelt made a rough sketch for wings to be added on to the north and south sides of the building should additional space be needed for her papers. At the time of her death in 1962 Mrs. Roosevelt's papers totaled three million pages.

The library contains the donated papers of others associated with Roosevelt, such as Henry Morgenthau, Jr.'s diary of 840 volumes.[1]:{{{3}}}

Presidential Libraries Act

Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt at the Library and Museum cornerstone ceremony in 1939

Roosevelt's actions served as a precedent. When Congress passed the Presidential Libraries Act in 1955, it regularized the procedures initiated by President Roosevelt for privately built and federally maintained libraries to preserve the papers of future Presidents. Even though official presidential papers are now public property as a result of the Presidential Records Act of 1978, and there is legislation limiting the size and financing of museums, Roosevelt's original intentions of preserving papers in one place and making them accessible to the nation still hold true. In July, 2015 the U.S. Archivist David Ferriero appointed Paul M. Sparrow to be the new Director of the FDR Library and Museum.

Museum

Visitor Center at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt National Historic Site

Roosevelt hoped the library would become an important research center and attract visitors to the museum. The museum section of the building opened June 30, 1941. However, the onset of World War II changed Roosevelt's plans, and the official opening of the library as a research facility was deferred as the President served a third term and then was elected to a fourth term in 1944. He visited the library often during the war to sort and classify his records and memorabilia; and from his study in the library he delivered several of his famous radio speeches or "fireside chats".

President Roosevelt paid his last visit to Hyde Park in March, 1945 and died on April 12 at Warm Springs, Georgia, at the age of sixty-three.

The museum was renovated in the 2010s. The state-of-the-art museum now includes 12,000 square feet of exhibit space consisting of personal and presidential artifacts and touchscreen and other media technology.

References

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External links