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Roosevelt, Franklin D.
- A political leader of the twentieth century. Roosevelt was president from 1933 to 1945, longer than anyone else in American history; he was elected four times. Roosevelt, a Democrat who had been governor of New York , defeated President Herbert Hoover in the election of 1932. He took office at one of the worst points in the Great Depression but told the American public, “ The only thing we have to fear is fear itself .” The early part of his presidency is remembered for the New Deal , a group of government programs designed to reverse the devastating effects of the Depression. He used fireside chats over the radio to build public support for his policies. In the later years of his presidency, he attempted to support the Allies in World War II without bringing the United States into the war. At this time, he made his speech announcing the Four Freedoms . After the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor , the United States entered the war. Roosevelt began the Manhattan Project , which produced the atomic bomb (see also atomic bomb ), a weapon that after his death brought a quick but highly controversial end to the war. Near the war's end, Roosevelt negotiated the Yalta agreement with Britain and the Soviet Union . He died a few weeks before Germany surrendered and before the end of the war with Japan .
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Upon his death, he was listed in the daily wartime casualty reports published in newspapers across the country: “Army-Navy Dead: ROOSEVELT, Franklin D., commander-in-chief …”
The book looks at the varying leadership qualities in the presidents she’s studied: Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson.
Over the course of five decades, she has devoted her career to the study of American presidential leadership including Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson.
Pulitzer-Prize winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin is a giant on the history and biography shelves, with books about the lives of some of the most iconic U.S. presidents — Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson.
Covering the century that stretched from the abolition of slavery to the civil-rights victories of the mid-1960s, he explains how the nation has required activist liberal presidents — above all Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman and Lyndon B. Johnson — to replace fear with hope and then to reverse injustice and expand equality.
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