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Eleanor and Franklin

Page 132

by Joseph P. Lash


  Webb, Sidney, 184

  Weber, Max, 571

  Wechsler, James A., 897

  Welles, Sumner, 715, 718–19, 726, 727, 733, 835, 889

  West, James E., 696

  White, Capt. Robert M., 875

  White, Walter, 594, 595, 647, 648, 651–56, 661, 662, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672–73, 674, 676, 678, 852, 853, 855, 857, 864, 904

  White, William Allen, 781

  Whitehead, Alfred North, 595

  Whitehead, Harry, 407

  Whitney, William C., 497

  Wigner, Eugene, 898, 899, 901

  Wilhelmina, Queen, 846

  Wilkins, Roy, 674

  Willert, Lady Florence, 481, 510, 682, 806

  Williams, Aubrey, 582, 589, 636, 639, 661, 669, 674–75, 676, 677–78, 763, 764, 766, 778

  racial issue and, 649

  youth movement and, 681, 684, 685, 687, 689, 694, 697, 700, 701n

  Williams, Charl, 360, 917

  Willkie, Wendell, 669, 672, 787, 791n, 798, 799, 800–801, 802–3, 806, 826, 846, 865, 896

  Wilmerding, Helen, see Cutting, Helen

  Wilmerding, Lucius, 178

  Wilson, Margaret, 265

  Wilson, M. L.:

  and Subsistence Homestead Program, 496, 497–99, 500, 504, 505–6, 512, 523

  visits with Roosevelts, 496–97

  Wilson, Mrs. Woodrow, 265, 284, 912

  Wilson, Woodrow, 216–18, 224, 229–30, 231, 232, 233, 246, 248–49, 250, 251, 252–54, 256, 257, 267, 282, 283, 284, 287–90, 307, 309, 350, 351, 390, 671, 750

  Eleanor’s views on, 282

  Franklin backs in 1912, 216–17, 218

  gossip concerning in Paris, 284

  inaugural address of, 229

  and 1916 elections, 252

  Paris Peace Conference and, 282, 287

  Theodore Roosevelt’s death and, 283

  World War I and, 248–49, 250–51, 252–54

  Winant, Gilbert, 837, 838, 849

  Winchell, Walter, 829

  Winston, Owen, 172

  Winthrop, Bronson, 156

  Wirt, Dr. William A., 501–2, 746

  Wise, John Sargeant, 28

  Women’s Trade union League, 348–50, 361

  see also Roosevelt, Eleanor

  Wood, Gen. Leonard, 257, 750

  Woodrow Wilson Foundation, 350

  Woodward, Ellen S., 486

  Woolf, S. J., 429

  is taken with Eleanor, 388–89

  Workers Alliance, 757–58, 766–67, 773

  see also Roosevelt, Eleanor

  World Court, 352, 354, 432–34, 706

  see also Roosevelt, Eleanor; Roosevelt, Franklin Delano

  Wright, Richard, 663–64

  Young, Owen D., 387, 433

  Zabriskie, Josie (Mrs. Edward Hall), 112

  PRAISE FOR ELEANOR AND FRANKLIN

  “The intimate chronicle of a woman and a marriage. The woman was Eleanor Roosevelt, and her marriage to Franklin D. Roosevelt—with its painful secrets and public triumphs—played a vital role not only in the lives of these two extraordinary human beings but in the lives of all humanity. Here is one of the great and moving stories of our time—a masterpiece of vivid evocation and sympathetic understanding. ‘Monumental.’ ”

  —New York Times

  “WHOLLY ABSORBING AND RICHLY DOCUMENTED. . . . Eleanor Roosevelt’s major burdens as a woman were two: the first was Sara Delano Roosevelt, her mother-in-law, oppressor, tyrant, self-appointed possessor of her son Franklin and every thing and person close to him. The other was Eleanor’s burden of anguish born through Franklin’s love affair with Lucy Mercer, whom Eleanor had employed as a social secretary.”

  —Marya Mannes, The Atlantic

  “AN EXCEPTIONALLY CANDID, EXHAUSTIVE . . . HEARTRENDING BOOK. . . . The highest praise one can pay Mr. Lash is that he has proved worthy in every particular of an immense and chancy undertaking.”

  —Brendan Gill, The New Yorker

  “A STUNNING, MAGNIFICENT ACHIEVEMENT—that combination of scholarship and narrative drive which is so rare. I had thought I understood Eleanor Roosevelt. Now I know how little I knew.”

  —William Manchester

  “EXTRAORDINARY . . . a unique American drama!”

  —William Hogan, San Francisco Chronicle

  “A MARVELOUS BOOK.”

  —Donald Meyer, The New Republic

  Copyright © 1971 by Joseph P. Lash.

  Foreword copyright © 1971 by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.

  Introduction copyright © 1971 by Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr.

  Reprinted with the permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc. from The Secret Diary of Harold L. Ickes by Harold L. Ickes; copyright © 1953 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.; copyright renewed © 1981 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.; all rights reserved. Eleanor Roosevelt’s article “I Remember Hyde Park,” McCall’s Magazine, February 1963, by permission of Nancy Roosevelt Ireland. Twenty-seven quotations totaling 517 words from This I Remember by Eleanor Roosevelt; copyright © 1949 by Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, renewed © 1977 by John A. Roosevelt and Franklin A. Roosevelt, Jr.; reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers and Nancy Roosevelt Ireland. Twelve quotations totaling 307 words from This Is My Story by Eleanor Roosevelt; copyright © 1937 by Anne Eleanor Roosevelt; copyright renewed 1965 by Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., and John Roosevelt; reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers and Nancy Roosevelt Ireland.

  All photographs are by permission of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

  Facsimile reproduction in the text are by courtesy of the

  Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

  All rights reserved

  First published as a Norton paperback 2014

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book,

  write to Permissions, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.,

  500 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10110

  For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact

  W. W. Norton Special Sales at specialsales@wwnorton.com or 800-233-4830

  Book design by Brian Mulligan

  Production manager: Louise Parasmo

  The Library of Congress has cataloged a previous edition as follows:

  Catalog Card No. 72-152667

  ISBN 393 07459 5

  ISBN 978-0-393-34975-7 pbk.

  ISBN 978-0-393-24765-7 (e-book)

  W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110

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